Presidential Posts

Monday, November 14, 2016

DM eNEWS - Liquor store RESENT

THIS is a RESENT copy because the second attachment was not a jpeg file.  Doc files don’t show up in our e-News files.



 

                                                                                                           November 14, 2016
The DMN e-News and an occasional hard copy DMN News are published by the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association (DMNA) on an “as-needed” schedule.  The Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association, Inc. has been working to unite neighbors to solve mutual problems and promote fellowship among neighbors since 1973.  Our neighborhood is in Madison & Fitchburg.
               President: Yannette (Janet) Cole, yfcole@gmail.com  332-7003
               News contact:  Mary Mullen
, mmullen4337@charter.net  298-0843
              Website: http://www.dunnsmarsh.org <http://www.dunnsmarsh.org>
              On Facebook:   
Type Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association into the Facebook search box.
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ARTICLES  (All articles written by Mary Mullen unless noted otherwise)
 
           LIQUOR LICENSE FOR ZIMMER’S LOCATION
1- Liquor License Public Hearing Set for Wed., Nov. 16, 5:30 pm  
(Attachment: “1 4217 ap.pdf”)
2 - Have an Opinion, But Can’t Go to the Hearing?
3 - Informational Meeting Held at Zimmer’s Nov. 3, Attracts Small Crowd
4 - WSJ Coverage of Informational Meeting / DMNA Position on Liquor License
5 - Litter Along the Frontage Roads Yields Many Alcohol Containers
(Attachment: “2 alcohol containers Nov2016”)

           NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION
6 - New DMNA Council Gets Off to Good Start
7 - DMNA Council Contact Information
8 - DMNA Accomplishments, Past Year
9 - Annual Meeting Notes
10 - Keep Up with Us
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LIQUOR LICENSE FOR ZIMMER’S LOCATION

1- Liquor License Public Hearing Set for Wed., Nov. 16, 5:30 pm  
(Attachment: “1 4217 ap.pdf”)
Zimmer's Liquor Store has been sold to a new owner, and that owner, Gurpreet Ghuman, wants to open her own liquor store in the building.   The new owner of the location at 4217 West Beltline Highway must first get a liquor license in her own name.

The hearing about issuing the license comes before the Madison Alcohol License Review Committee this coming Wednesday, November 16.  The meeting starts at 5:30 pm in Room 201 of the City County Building, 210 Martin Luther King, Jr., Blvd.  Although this item is #21 on the agenda, items are often moved up when there are people wanting to speak for or against the license.

There’s an etiquette you’ll want to know if you wish to speak before the committee.  

1.    Arrive early enough to park, walk to the building, locate the room, find the registration forms, and fill them out before the meeting time of 5:30.

2.    Fill out the form.  It asks you to list your name and maybe your address, the agenda item (#21), whom you represent (yourself), and check offs - for/against, wishing to speak/not wishing to speak.

3.    Hand in the form to the person collecting them at the podium.

4.    When the item comes up, you will be allowed only 3 minutes to speak.  It helps a lot to write out and time your talk.  If you don’t want to write it out, at least have outline notes, and practice it to see if it fits in the 3-minute limit.

To see the application, look at the attachment, or go to http://www.cityofmadison.com/rss/alrc.cfm <http://www.cityofmadison.com/rss/alrc.cfm>  If you use the link, you will have to click on the agenda, and then go down to item 21.

It is interesting to this reporter to see that the new owner is so confident of receiving a license that a brand new neon green poster on the door of the former Zimmer’s says there will be a Grand Opening of the store under new management on Friday, November 18.


2 - Have an Opinion, But Can’t Go to the Hearing?

Those who have a strong opinion on whether the alcohol license applicant should or should not be granted a license have another option in how to make that opinion known.

Communicate with the Alcohol License Review Committte (ALRC) via e-mail.  Write an e-mail to the Madison City Clerk at clerk@cityofmadison.com <mailto:clerk@cityofmadison.com>

A suggested subject line would be “ALRC, file #44846, 4217 W. Beltline”

By snail mail, write to City Clerk, City-County Building, Room 103, 210 Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd., Madison, WI 53703. However, since Madison’s mail now is transported to Milwaukee before being sent to addresses in Madison, there’s probably not time to mail a letter. You could hand deliver a letter to the Clerk’s office.

3 - Informational Meeting Held at Zimmers Nov. 3, Attracts Small Crowd

Eleven people gathered at the Zimmer’s Liquors building at 4217 West Beltline Highway on a sunny but brisk Thursday morning, November 3.  All were there to talk about the change in ownership of the liquor store and the new owner’s application for a Class A Liquor and Beer license.  Liquor licenses cannot simply be passed on.  They belong to the owner, not the premises.

Manpreet Ghuman, husband of the applicant for a liquor store to replace Zimmer’s, gave a short presentation and then answered questions.  His wife Gurpreet Ghuman is the applicant. She did not attend the meeting.  Mr. Ghuman explained that the application is in his wife’s name because the money for purchase came from sale of her family’s land in India.

The Owner’s Family.  Mr. Ghuman portrayed himself as a family man with 2 young children and noted that his family would run the store - he, his wife, and his mother. Later he said that he would be the one managing this store while his wife and mother would be in charge of their Rocky’s Liquor store at 4429 Milwaukee Street. They’ve had that store for 2 ½ years.  His own family had been in the alcohol business for 20 years, he said.  His wife is the licensee for the Milwaukee store as well as the applicant for the Zimmer’s location.

Attendees had a lot of questions and concerns.  

Problems Next Door.  Staff members from the immediate nextdoor neighbor, NAMI  (National Alliance on Mental Illness) pointed out that liquor store customers often park on the NAMI property and that NAMI has had to call 911 due to drug deals made there by liquor store customers. When Mr. Ghuman said that he’d have cameras outside the liquor store, he made it clear that he would only be monitoring his property.  “NAMI should get their own cameras,” he said.

In further talk, Mr. Ghuman was hazy on what kind of camera system he would install. When someone asked how long the recordings would be saved, he said,  “I don’t know:  it depends on the system.”  He also  could not say how often he would review the recordings.

Inebriated or Underage Customers.  Another issue was about selling alcohol to inebriated customers.  Nearby neighbors have experienced cases where people have passed out in their yards.  Mr. Ghuman said he would not sell to customers who were alcoholics or were drunk.  He also suggested that the neighbor who brought this up didn’t know if the unconscious persons had purchased alcohol at the store.  He mentioned that the city has a list of people that liquor stores are not supposed to sell to.  Whether these are the people who have passed out in local yards is another question. But, he added that he was responsible only for people on his premises, not what they do after they leave his store and property.  

Apparently, the issue of people who have over indulged is not only a problem in local yards. In response to the article that appeared on November 4 in the Wisconsin State Journal about the informational meeting, a new Fitchburg resident who lives about a mile from the store e-mailed about experiences he had had with two different inebriated men.  One was face down on the concrete near the store.   Another passerby and he stopped and called 911.  The other man had been walking drunkenly down Seminole Highway, and again this new resident called 911.  It was determined that both men had purchased their alcohol at Zimmer’s.  

                   


Concern was also expressed about underage drinkers.  One attendee said that her underage son had often taken the bus to Zimmer’s in order to buy alcohol and drugs.  Mr. Ghuman said that of course he wouldn’t sell to underage drinkers.  He also said he’d look outside to see that there weren’t undereage drinkers sitting in cars waiting for alcohol to be purchased for them.

Litter. Others brought up the litter problem on the frontage roads and nearby streets. They asked if the new owner would cooperate in picking up the alcohol bottles that accumulate nearby.  Mr. Ghuman assured everyone that he would keep his own property cleaned up. But he bristled at the idea of picking up litter anywhere else.  “You can’t even prove that those bottles came from the store,” he said. He also said that he could not ask his employees pick up litter that accumulates on the other side of the frontage road from the liquor store “because of liability.“  He did not answer Alder Dorothy Krause’s question about whether he could work with the Court system to use helpers who were court-ordered to do community service.

The majority of alcohol containers found discarded on the frontage roads and on Britta Parkway are the 50 milliliter “airplane” bottles.  A recent few days of picking litter from the frontage roads starting at Seminole and going all the way to the Summit entrance to Verona Road found that 53% of the alcohol containers were  bottles that size.  (Others ranged upward to 750 mL.)  One person asked if the Ghumans would be amenable to not carrying the little one-dose bottles.  Mr. Ghuman said that a condition of a license in the campus area was that airplane bottles not be sold.  It seemed that he would rather be able to sell them, but if the City required it, he would not carry them.

Plans.  The conversation turned to his other plans.   He said he asked the Zimmer staff to work for him, but they had refused. The store would be closed from November 11 to November 18 for clean-up.  He would be asking for a temporary license to operate starting then even though the City Council wouldn’t be scheduled to approve the license until December 6.

A call to the City Clerk’s office turned up the fact that a Provisional License can be issued to a new owner if the ALRC has recommended approval of the license and the premises has passed all inspections.  This “pre-City Council” license is issued because the City Council ordinarily rubber stamps whatever the ALRC recommends.  The staff member estimated that only about 1 in 200 cases has the Council chosen a different action than the ALRC recommends.

Meeting Attendees.   Attendees at the meeting included 5 neighborhood residents - Annette Shesman, Patty Stockdale, Fitchburg Alder and County Supervisor Dorothy Krause, DMNA President Mary Mullen, and DMNA Council member Thea Bach.  Also attending were business neighbors Nate Schorr and Crystal Hester from NAMI, Joe Schlesing from the Meadowood Community Center, Barry Adams from the Wisconsin State Journal, and one other person who preferred not to be named.


4 - WSJ Coverage of Informational Meeting / DMNA Position on Liquor License

One of the attendees at the informational meeting about the liquor license application for the Zimmer’s location was Wisconsin State Journal reporter Barry Adams.  He wrote an article for the paper.

In the article, published on November 4, he says that the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association opposes the liquor store.  In actuality, at the time of the November 3 informational meeting, the people attending the DMNA annual meeting [October 27]  had only taken a position to inform the neighborhood of the meetings about the liquor store.

Since the informational meeting, the newly-elected DMNA Council held its organizational meeting and passed a motion regarding the license application.  The motion passed on November 11 asked only that conditions be placed on the liquor license if one is issued.

This is the wording of the motion, that:  “The DMNA, based on past history, requests the following conditions if a liquor license is granted to the owner of the 4217 West Beltline location: (1) no sales of alcohol in small [50 mL] "airplane" bottles, (2) outdoor lights with motion sensors for all sides of the building; (3) outdoor cameras on the premises that cover the entire property, of a quality that could be used in court, and which retain at least 2 weeks of recordings; (4) reporting to police of all illegal activities found on camera recordings or seen in person.”

Mr. Adam’s article can be accessed at <http://host.madison.com/wsj/business/old-liquor-store-with-new-owner-brings-opposition/article_348cd69b-f5e6-55db-a76d-39c70853024c.html>



5 - Litter Along the Frontage Roads Yields Many Alcohol Containers   
(Attachment: “2 alcohol containers Nov2016”)

Did you recently see an older woman in a construction green neon shirt with an orange pail, a white pail, and a garbage bin labeled Marlb Garden along the frontage road?  That was me.  Periodically I pick up litter along the Beltline and Verona frontage roads.

Almost always I separate the “treasure” into 3 categories:  alcohol containers, non-alcohol recyclable containers, and everything else. “Everything else” is styrofoam, paper products, snack bags, plastic bags, cellophane fragments, and anything else that isn’t recyclable.

I went out on 3 different sunny, warm days in November. November 3, November 5, and November 10.  I also had picked up drink containers in Marlborough Park on October 4.  

What did I find?  First of all, more alcohol containers than combined soft-drink, juice, and water bottles and cans.  The ratio was 144 to 108.  Secondly, 2 pretty full small garbage bins of non-recyclable litter.  I would have filled more bins, but I was running out of time and eventually just picked up recyclables and left the rest of the litter where it lay.

Finally, I found a larger proportion of alcohol bottles nearer to the liquor store and more soft drink, juice and water bottles closer to the gas stations that sell those kinds of beverages as well as beer. It was only on the day that I combed the area that included the Verona Road frontage road that the alcohol containers were exceeded by water/juice/soft drink containers. The ratio that day was 18 alcohol vs 45 other.  Along the Beltline and in Marlborough Park,  alcohol containers greatly outnumbered the non-alcohol containers.  One day it was 71 alcohol vs 31 non-alcohol containers.  Another day it was 46 alcohol vs 31 non-alcohol containers.  In the park, it was 9 alcohol containers and 1 pop can.

 
        


For those who like statistics, I did keep track of the kinds of alcohol containers I found.  Not counted are the 10 or so bottles crushed into the grass by mowing machinery.
 
  Number of containers / %   Size of containers   
  77                           53 %   50-milliliter “airplane” hard liquor bottles   
   8                              6   100-milliliter hard liquor bottles   
  11                             8   200-milliliter hard liquor bottles   
  11                             8   375-milliliter hard liquor bottles   
   1                              1   750-millitliter hard liquor bottles   
  12                             8   Beer or similar-strength alcohol bottles   
  24                           17   Beer cans   
  144    TOTAL       101 %*   Alcohol containers  

* totals to more than 100% due to rounding error

 

NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION

6 - New DMNA Council Gets Off to Good Start

A peaceful election on October 27 and an even more satisfying first Council meeting brought a transfer of power to the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Council.  The DMNA Council is the governing body of the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association.

Seven members of the Council were chosen at the DMNA Anuual Meeting on October 27.  Five of the six were returning members.  Those elected that night - in alphabetical order - were Thea Bach, Yannette Cole, Faith Cholvin, Elvice McAlpine, Mary Mullen, Shonita Roach, and newcomer Peter Schmitt.  Peter had served on the Council several years ago.

Because the Council can be as large as 12 members, more members were sought.  Two more volunteers rose to the occasion at the first meeting of new Council on November 10.   They were Dale-Harriet Rogovich and Sam Shesman.  Both are complete newcomers to the DMNA although Dale has lived in the neighborhood since 1973.  Sam just moved here in April.

Officers were chosen on November 10. Yannette Cole stepped forward to take over the presidency from Mary Mullen who thought it was time to step back from leadership after 3 years in the post.  Yannette also represents the Marlborough area of the neighborhood. We all breathed a sigh of relief that Yannette was willing to lead the DMNA. She is extremely capable. We can thank her for putting together our completely revamped website www.dunnsmarsh.org <http://www.dunnsmarsh.org>

Elected as Vice President was Shonita Roach, a resident of the Allied area of our neighborhood.  This is her second year on the Council.

Elvice McAlpine, who has had half a term as secretary, agreed to continue in the post for the coming year.  Elvice represents the Belmar part of the neighborhood and is starting her third year on the Council.

Finally, Faith Chovin volunteered to take over the treasurer’s position.  That was the post that Yannette Cole held for the past 2 years.  Faith represents the Crawford area of the neighborhood and is starting her second year on the DMNA Council.

We thank the retiring members from last year who did not find it possible to continue:  Karen Walters, Susan Watson, Tony Williams, and Sina Davis.
 
 
 
        
 
 
 
                                                



7 - DMNA Council Contact Information

Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Council representatives are the people who make decisions for the DMNA between membership meetings. Their positions and contact information is provided so that you can contact them with your concerns or ideas for how to make this neighborhood and even better place to live.
 
The small map shows where each of the 4 areas are that Council members represent.
 
Marlborough Reps
Yannette (Janet) Cole, President - 332-7003, yfcole@gmail.com
Mary Mullen - 298-0843, 4336 Milford Rd., mmullen4337@charter.net
Thea Bach - 274-7730 (h), 239-9810 (cell), 1905 Danbury St., bachtown2@live.com
Sam Shesman - (814) 806-2427, 1806 Danbury St., samshes@gmail.com
Dale-Harriet Rogovich - 274-6709
 
Crawford Rep
Faith Cholvin, Treasurer - 213-7832, 4337 Britta Drive, #1, cholvinfaith@gmail.com

 
 
Belmar Rep
Elvice McAlpine, Secretary - (608) 208-3819, 4526 Crescent Rd., e.mcalpine@yahoo.com

Allied Rep
Shonita Roach - 509-1645, 2426 Allied Dri., #4, svictoriascott@yahoo.com
Peter Schmitt - 338-4519, P15jschmitt@gmail.com

We still have room for 3 more people on the Council. We’d like to get at least one from the Belmar area and one from the Crawford area.  If you think you might be interested, contact one of the current members and then come to the next Council meeting on Thursday, December 8, 6:30 pm, at Prairie UU Society, 2010 Whenona Drive.
 
 
 
8 - DMNA Accomplishments, Past Year

Annual meeting attendees each received this list of DMNA accomplishments during the past year.

DMNA Council met every month
Nov. 2015-Oct. 2016 (although 3 times we did not have a quorum), and members set priorities for the year; planned DMNA events; kept up on buying club, grocery store, home-building progress and other issues; and heard informational speakers.  Invited speakers were Co. Supervisor Richard Kilmer, Deirdre Garton from the Verona Road Business Coalition, Ravi Singh from the BP service station, Police Officer Mike McWhinney, and Brad Herrick and Michael Hansen from the Arboretum.  (Council members who attended the majority of meetings:  President Mary Mullen, Secretary Elvice McAlpine, Treasurer Yannette Cole, Thea Bach, Faith Cholvin, Shonita Skinner, and Susan Watson; other members Karen Walters, Tony Williams, and Sina Davis).

Published 6 issues of the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood e-New
s
(by e-mail on 2/9, 3/31, 6/20, 7/31, 10/25 and 10/26) and 3 hardcopy flyers (6/17, 8/1, & 10/24, delivered door-to-door to over 600 residences). Content & design by Mary Mullen; delivery by Thea Bach, Sharon Grant, Pam Flinn, Mary Mullen, Faith Cholvin, Kim Zinski & daughters Sage & Olivia, Elvice McAlpine, David Martin, Kent Seeker, Julie Lyne, Mary Somers, Patty Stockdale, Donna Sarafin, James Luscher, Tony William, Melanie Sax, & Rachel Potter.

Kept up a Facebook page. (Mary Mullen)

Our Treasurer Yannette Cole developed an all-new website www.dunnsmarsh.org <http://www.dunnsmarsh.org>  which required uncounted hours of her time.  It is now hosted through GoDaddy.

Held a neighborhood book and movie club that attracted 4-10 people monthly to discussions and potlucks. (Thea Bach)

Co-sponsored Make Music Madison with Prairie UU Society & provided  volunteers to help run the day, 6/21. (Mary Mullen, Yannette Cole, Elvice McAlpine, Faith Cholvin, Patty Stockdale). Neighborhood performers included Mary Mullen and Jesse Cole. Attendees for each act ranged up to 41 people, with an average of 30.  The community participated in a Maypole dance at the end of a beautiful day.  

            
 


Held Annual Picnic, August  5, which attracted over 55 people.  Attendees had a chance to chat with Co. Executive Joe Parisi and staff member Wes Sparkman, Fitchburg Mayor Steve Arnold, Alder Maurice Cheeks, and Alder Dorothy Krause. (Yannette Cole, Thea Bach, Cindy Harrington, Mary Mullen, Shonita Skinner)

Worked on relocating the  Little Free Library now at the corner of Lumley Road and Danbury Street, due to repeated vandalism. (Elvice McAlpine)


9 - Annual Meeting Notes

Although the annual meeting of the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association was not very well attended, members accomplished the necessary work.
 
Representatives to the Neighborhood Council were chosen, as detailed in previous articles.
 
People got a chance to say what they liked about the neighborhoood and what they thought the DMNA should work on during the year. Ideas filled a flipchart page.
 
Attendees learned that the organization is solvent, with an ending bank balance of $1,128.53 - $4 more than the starting balance of October 2015.  Most of our funding goes to communicating with the neighborhood.  Most of our income comes from dues, donations, and advertising.
 
A new by-law change was voted in with the purpose of helping the Council maintain a quorum.  During the past 2 years the Council had several meetings without a quorum due to low attendance.  The by-law change defines what is deemed a resignation:  “Three consecutive absences from Neighborhood Council meetings without valid excuse or without informing the President or Secretary of the Association, or five absences for any reason -- consecutive or not -- within a term of service, shall be deemed a resignation.” The language in italics is new.

We heard at length from our Madison Alder Maurice Cheeks about progress toward a grocery store in the neighborhood.  A market study has been completed.  The findings were that a small “corner store” or a store connected to some other attraction such as a neighborhood center would be most likely to be successful.  Putting a store in a “business district” might be another way to bring in customers.
 
Besides Alder Cheeks, 2 other elected representatives attended the meeting, Fitchburg Alder and County Supervisor Dorothy Krause, and County Supervisor Richard Kilmer.  Co. Sup. Krause represents the Fitchburg part of the neighborhood and Kilmer represents the Madison portion.  We thank all 3 representatives for taking the time to join us for our meeting.


10 - Keep Up with Us
Want to know what’s happening in the neighborhood and what the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association is doing?
There are 3 good ways to do so.

For day-to-day information, check out our Facebook page, Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association.

For a much broader picture, look at our website www.dunnsmarsh.org <http://www.dunnsmarsh.org>   There you can learn about our history, our bylaws, our publications, our parks and open space, the many bike trails, and about other community resources. We’ve been around since 1973!

Through the calendar on the home page and another separate calendar page where you can see whole months at a time, you can learn about meetings of the DMNA Council and of the Allied Community Co-op that is working on a grocery-buying club as well as on getting a grocery store.

There’s lots more, and lots of photos.  You can also join the DMNA and pay your voluntary dues online and find other volunteer activities.

The third way to keep up is to attend the monthly Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Council meetings.  They are held on the second Thursday of the month, 6:30 pm, at Prairie Unitarian Universalist Society, 2010 Whenona Drive.  (Enter on the Crawford Drive side.)  Any resident is welcome to attend.  The next meeting is December 8.

If you want the Council to take up a particular issue, it’s best to contact the president, Yannette (Janet) Cole, at 332-7003 or yfcole@gmail.com




-----------End of the DUNN’S MARSH NEIGHBORHOOD E-NEWS for 11/14/16

DM eNEWS - Liquor store



                                                                                                           November 14, 2016
The DMN e-News and an occasional hard copy DMN News are published by the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association (DMNA) on an “as-needed” schedule.  The Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association, Inc. has been working to unite neighbors to solve mutual problems and promote fellowship among neighbors since 1973.  Our neighborhood is in Madison & Fitchburg.
               President: Yannette (Janet) Cole, yfcole@gmail.com  332-7003
               News contact:  Mary Mullen
, mmullen4337@charter.net  298-0843
              Website: http://www.dunnsmarsh.org <http://www.dunnsmarsh.org>
              On Facebook:   
Type Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association into the Facebook search box.
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ARTICLES  (All articles written by Mary Mullen unless noted otherwise)
 
           LIQUOR LICENSE FOR ZIMMER’S LOCATION
1- Liquor License Public Hearing Set for Wed., Nov. 16, 5:30 pm  
(Attachment: “1 4217 ap.pdf”)
2 - Have an Opinion, But Can’t Go to the Hearing?
3 - Informational Meeting Held at Zimmer’s Nov. 3, Attracts Small Crowd
4 - WSJ Coverage of Informational Meeting / DMNA Position on Liquor License
5 - Litter Along the Frontage Roads Yields Many Alcohol Containers
(Attachment: “2 alcohol containers Nov2016”)

           NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION
6 - New DMNA Council Gets Off to Good Start
7 - DMNA Council Contact Information
8 - DMNA Accomplishments, Past Year
9 - Annual Meeting Notes
10 - Keep Up with Us
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LIQUOR LICENSE FOR ZIMMER’S LOCATION

1- Liquor License Public Hearing Set for Wed., Nov. 16, 5:30 pm  
(Attachment: “1 4217 ap.pdf”)
Zimmer's Liquor Store has been sold to a new owner, and that owner, Gurpreet Ghuman, wants to open her own liquor store in the building.   The new owner of the location at 4217 West Beltline Highway must first get a liquor license in her own name.

The hearing about issuing the license comes before the Madison Alcohol License Review Committee this coming Wednesday, November 16.  The meeting starts at 5:30 pm in Room 201 of the City County Building, 210 Martin Luther King, Jr., Blvd.  Although this item is #21 on the agenda, items are often moved up when there are people wanting to speak for or against the license.

There’s an etiquette you’ll want to know if you wish to speak before the committee.  

1.    Arrive early enough to park, walk to the building, locate the room, find the registration forms, and fill them out before the meeting time of 5:30.

2.    Fill out the form.  It asks you to list your name and maybe your address, the agenda item (#21), whom you represent (yourself), and check offs - for/against, wishing to speak/not wishing to speak.

3.    Hand in the form to the person collecting them at the podium.

4.    When the item comes up, you will be allowed only 3 minutes to speak.  It helps a lot to write out and time your talk.  If you don’t want to write it out, at least have outline notes, and practice it to see if it fits in the 3-minute limit.

To see the application, look at the attachment, or go to http://www.cityofmadison.com/rss/alrc.cfm <http://www.cityofmadison.com/rss/alrc.cfm>  If you use the link, you will have to click on the agenda, and then go down to item 21.

It is interesting to this reporter to see that the new owner is so confident of receiving a license that a brand new neon green poster on the door of the former Zimmer’s says there will be a Grand Opening of the store under new management on Friday, November 18.


2 - Have an Opinion, But Can’t Go to the Hearing?

Those who have a strong opinion on whether the alcohol license applicant should or should not be granted a license have another option in how to make that opinion known.

Communicate with the Alcohol License Review Committte (ALRC) via e-mail.  Write an e-mail to the Madison City Clerk at clerk@cityofmadison.com <mailto:clerk@cityofmadison.com>

A suggested subject line would be “ALRC, file #44846, 4217 W. Beltline”

By snail mail, write to City Clerk, City-County Building, Room 103, 210 Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd., Madison, WI 53703. However, since Madison’s mail now is transported to Milwaukee before being sent to addresses in Madison, there’s probably not time to mail a letter. You could hand deliver a letter to the Clerk’s office.

3 - Informational Meeting Held at Zimmers Nov. 3, Attracts Small Crowd

Eleven people gathered at the Zimmer’s Liquors building at 4217 West Beltline Highway on a sunny but brisk Thursday morning, November 3.  All were there to talk about the change in ownership of the liquor store and the new owner’s application for a Class A Liquor and Beer license.  Liquor licenses cannot simply be passed on.  They belong to the owner, not the premises.

Manpreet Ghuman, husband of the applicant for a liquor store to replace Zimmer’s, gave a short presentation and then answered questions.  His wife Gurpreet Ghuman is the applicant. She did not attend the meeting.  Mr. Ghuman explained that the application is in his wife’s name because the money for purchase came from sale of her family’s land in India.

The Owner’s Family.  Mr. Ghuman portrayed himself as a family man with 2 young children and noted that his family would run the store - he, his wife, and his mother. Later he said that he would be the one managing this store while his wife and mother would be in charge of their Rocky’s Liquor store at 4429 Milwaukee Street. They’ve had that store for 2 ½ years.  His own family had been in the alcohol business for 20 years, he said.  His wife is the licensee for the Milwaukee store as well as the applicant for the Zimmer’s location.

Attendees had a lot of questions and concerns.  

Problems Next Door.  Staff members from the immediate nextdoor neighbor, NAMI  (National Alliance on Mental Illness) pointed out that liquor store customers often park on the NAMI property and that NAMI has had to call 911 due to drug deals made there by liquor store customers. When Mr. Ghuman said that he’d have cameras outside the liquor store, he made it clear that he would only be monitoring his property.  “NAMI should get their own cameras,” he said.

In further talk, Mr. Ghuman was hazy on what kind of camera system he would install. When someone asked how long the recordings would be saved, he said,  “I don’t know:  it depends on the system.”  He also  could not say how often he would review the recordings.

Inebriated or Underage Customers.  Another issue was about selling alcohol to inebriated customers.  Nearby neighbors have experienced cases where people have passed out in their yards.  Mr. Ghuman said he would not sell to customers who were alcoholics or were drunk.  He also suggested that the neighbor who brought this up didn’t know if the unconscious persons had purchased alcohol at the store.  He mentioned that the city has a list of people that liquor stores are not supposed to sell to.  Whether these are the people who have passed out in local yards is another question. But, he added that he was responsible only for people on his premises, not what they do after they leave his store and property.  

Apparently, the issue of people who have over indulged is not only a problem in local yards. In response to the article that appeared on November 4 in the Wisconsin State Journal about the informational meeting, a new Fitchburg resident who lives about a mile from the store e-mailed about experiences he had had with two different inebriated men.  One was face down on the concrete near the store.   Another passerby and he stopped and called 911.  The other man had been walking drunkenly down Seminole Highway, and again this new resident called 911.  It was determined that both men had purchased their alcohol at Zimmer’s.  

                   


Concern was also expressed about underage drinkers.  One attendee said that her underage son had often taken the bus to Zimmer’s in order to buy alcohol and drugs.  Mr. Ghuman said that of course he wouldn’t sell to underage drinkers.  He also said he’d look outside to see that there weren’t undereage drinkers sitting in cars waiting for alcohol to be purchased for them.

Litter. Others brought up the litter problem on the frontage roads and nearby streets. They asked if the new owner would cooperate in picking up the alcohol bottles that accumulate nearby.  Mr. Ghuman assured everyone that he would keep his own property cleaned up. But he bristled at the idea of picking up litter anywhere else.  “You can’t even prove that those bottles came from the store,” he said. He also said that he could not ask his employees pick up litter that accumulates on the other side of the frontage road from the liquor store “because of liability.“  He did not answer Alder Dorothy Krause’s question about whether he could work with the Court system to use helpers who were court-ordered to do community service.

The majority of alcohol containers found discarded on the frontage roads and on Britta Parkway are the 50 milliliter “airplane” bottles.  A recent few days of picking litter from the frontage roads starting at Seminole and going all the way to the Summit entrance to Verona Road found that 53% of the alcohol containers were  bottles that size.  (Others ranged upward to 750 mL.)  One person asked if the Ghumans would be amenable to not carrying the little one-dose bottles.  Mr. Ghuman said that a condition of a license in the campus area was that airplane bottles not be sold.  It seemed that he would rather be able to sell them, but if the City required it, he would not carry them.

Plans.  The conversation turned to his other plans.   He said he asked the Zimmer staff to work for him, but they had refused. The store would be closed from November 11 to November 18 for clean-up.  He would be asking for a temporary license to operate starting then even though the City Council wouldn’t be scheduled to approve the license until December 6.

A call to the City Clerk’s office turned up the fact that a Provisional License can be issued to a new owner if the ALRC has recommended approval of the license and the premises has passed all inspections.  This “pre-City Council” license is issued because the City Council ordinarily rubber stamps whatever the ALRC recommends.  The staff member estimated that only about 1 in 200 cases has the Council chosen a different action than the ALRC recommends.

Meeting Attendees.   Attendees at the meeting included 5 neighborhood residents - Annette Shesman, Patty Stockdale, Fitchburg Alder and County Supervisor Dorothy Krause, DMNA President Mary Mullen, and DMNA Council member Thea Bach.  Also attending were business neighbors Nate Schorr and Crystal Hester from NAMI, Joe Schlesing from the Meadowood Community Center, Barry Adams from the Wisconsin State Journal, and one other person who preferred not to be named.


4 - WSJ Coverage of Informational Meeting / DMNA Position on Liquor License

One of the attendees at the informational meeting about the liquor license application for the Zimmer’s location was Wisconsin State Journal reporter Barry Adams.  He wrote an article for the paper.

In the article, published on November 4, he says that the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association opposes the liquor store.  In actuality, at the time of the November 3 informational meeting, the people attending the DMNA annual meeting [October 27]  had only taken a position to inform the neighborhood of the meetings about the liquor store.

Since the informational meeting, the newly-elected DMNA Council held its organizational meeting and passed a motion regarding the license application.  The motion passed on November 11 asked only that conditions be placed on the liquor license if one is issued.

This is the wording of the motion, that:  “The DMNA, based on past history, requests the following conditions if a liquor license is granted to the owner of the 4217 West Beltline location: (1) no sales of alcohol in small [50 mL] "airplane" bottles, (2) outdoor lights with motion sensors for all sides of the building; (3) outdoor cameras on the premises that cover the entire property, of a quality that could be used in court, and which retain at least 2 weeks of recordings; (4) reporting to police of all illegal activities found on camera recordings or seen in person.”

Mr. Adam’s article can be accessed at <http://host.madison.com/wsj/business/old-liquor-store-with-new-owner-brings-opposition/article_348cd69b-f5e6-55db-a76d-39c70853024c.html>



5 - Litter Along the Frontage Roads Yields Many Alcohol Containers   
(Attachment: “2 alcohol containers Nov2016”)

Did you recently see an older woman in a construction green neon shirt with an orange pail, a white pail, and a garbage bin labeled Marlb Garden along the frontage road?  That was me.  Periodically I pick up litter along the Beltline and Verona frontage roads.

Almost always I separate the “treasure” into 3 categories:  alcohol containers, non-alcohol recyclable containers, and everything else. “Everything else” is styrofoam, paper products, snack bags, plastic bags, cellophane fragments, and anything else that isn’t recyclable.

I went out on 3 different sunny, warm days in November. November 3, November 5, and November 10.  I also had picked up drink containers in Marlborough Park on October 4.  

What did I find?  First of all, more alcohol containers than combined soft-drink, juice, and water bottles and cans.  The ratio was 144 to 108.  Secondly, 2 pretty full small garbage bins of non-recyclable litter.  I would have filled more bins, but I was running out of time and eventually just picked up recyclables and left the rest of the litter where it lay.

Finally, I found a larger proportion of alcohol bottles nearer to the liquor store and more soft drink, juice and water bottles closer to the gas stations that sell those kinds of beverages as well as beer. It was only on the day that I combed the area that included the Verona Road frontage road that the alcohol containers were exceeded by water/juice/soft drink containers. The ratio that day was 18 alcohol vs 45 other.  Along the Beltline and in Marlborough Park,  alcohol containers greatly outnumbered the non-alcohol containers.  One day it was 71 alcohol vs 31 non-alcohol containers.  Another day it was 46 alcohol vs 31 non-alcohol containers.  In the park, it was 9 alcohol containers and 1 pop can.

 
        


For those who like statistics, I did keep track of the kinds of alcohol containers I found.  Not counted are the 10 or so bottles crushed into the grass by mowing machinery.
 
  Number of containers / %   Size of containers   
  77                           53 %   50-milliliter “airplane” hard liquor bottles   
   8                              6   100-milliliter hard liquor bottles   
  11                             8   200-milliliter hard liquor bottles   
  11                             8   375-milliliter hard liquor bottles   
   1                              1   750-millitliter hard liquor bottles   
  12                             8   Beer or similar-strength alcohol bottles   
  24                           17   Beer cans   
  144    TOTAL       101 %*   Alcohol containers  

* totals to more than 100% due to rounding error

 

NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION

6 - New DMNA Council Gets Off to Good Start

A peaceful election on October 27 and an even more satisfying first Council meeting brought a transfer of power to the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Council.  The DMNA Council is the governing body of the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association.

Seven members of the Council were chosen at the DMNA Anuual Meeting on October 27.  Five of the six were returning members.  Those elected that night - in alphabetical order - were Thea Bach, Yannette Cole, Faith Cholvin, Elvice McAlpine, Mary Mullen, Shonita Roach, and newcomer Peter Schmitt.  Peter had served on the Council several years ago.

Because the Council can be as large as 12 members, more members were sought.  Two more volunteers rose to the occasion at the first meeting of new Council on November 10.   They were Dale-Harriet Rogovich and Sam Shesman.  Both are complete newcomers to the DMNA although Dale has lived in the neighborhood since 1973.  Sam just moved here in April.

Officers were chosen on November 10. Yannette Cole stepped forward to take over the presidency from Mary Mullen who thought it was time to step back from leadership after 3 years in the post.  Yannette also represents the Marlborough area of the neighborhood. We all breathed a sigh of relief that Yannette was willing to lead the DMNA. She is extremely capable. We can thank her for putting together our completely revamped website www.dunnsmarsh.org <http://www.dunnsmarsh.org>

Elected as Vice President was Shonita Roach, a resident of the Allied area of our neighborhood.  This is her second year on the Council.

Elvice McAlpine, who has had half a term as secretary, agreed to continue in the post for the coming year.  Elvice represents the Belmar part of the neighborhood and is starting her third year on the Council.

Finally, Faith Chovin volunteered to take over the treasurer’s position.  That was the post that Yannette Cole held for the past 2 years.  Faith represents the Crawford area of the neighborhood and is starting her second year on the DMNA Council.

We thank the retiring members from last year who did not find it possible to continue:  Karen Walters, Susan Watson, Tony Williams, and Sina Davis.
 
 
 
        
 
 
 
                                                



7 - DMNA Council Contact Information

Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Council representatives are the people who make decisions for the DMNA between membership meetings. Their positions and contact information is provided so that you can contact them with your concerns or ideas for how to make this neighborhood and even better place to live.
 
The small map shows where each of the 4 areas are that Council members represent.
 
Marlborough Reps
Yannette (Janet) Cole, President - 332-7003, yfcole@gmail.com
Mary Mullen - 298-0843, 4336 Milford Rd., mmullen4337@charter.net
Thea Bach - 274-7730 (h), 239-9810 (cell), 1905 Danbury St., bachtown2@live.com
Sam Shesman - (814) 806-2427, 1806 Danbury St., samshes@gmail.com
Dale-Harriet Rogovich - 274-6709
 
Crawford Rep
Faith Cholvin, Treasurer - 213-7832, 4337 Britta Drive, #1, cholvinfaith@gmail.com

 
 
Belmar Rep
Elvice McAlpine, Secretary - (608) 208-3819, 4526 Crescent Rd., e.mcalpine@yahoo.com
 
Allied Rep
Shonita Roach - 509-1645, 2426 Allied Dri., #4, svictoriascott@yahoo.com
Peter Schmitt - 338-4519, P15jschmitt@gmail.com
 
We still have room for 3 more people on the Council. We’d like to get at least one from the Belmar area and one from the Crawford area.  If you think you might be interested, contact one of the current members and then come to the next Council meeting on Thursday, December 8, 6:30 pm, at Prairie UU Society, 2010 Whenona Drive.
 
 
 
8 - DMNA Accomplishments, Past Year

Annual meeting attendees each received this list of DMNA accomplishments during the past year.

DMNA Council met every month
Nov. 2015-Oct. 2016 (although 3 times we did not have a quorum), and members set priorities for the year; planned DMNA events; kept up on buying club, grocery store, home-building progress and other issues; and heard informational speakers.  Invited speakers were Co. Supervisor Richard Kilmer, Deirdre Garton from the Verona Road Business Coalition, Ravi Singh from the BP service station, Police Officer Mike McWhinney, and Brad Herrick and Michael Hansen from the Arboretum.  (Council members who attended the majority of meetings:  President Mary Mullen, Secretary Elvice McAlpine, Treasurer Yannette Cole, Thea Bach, Faith Cholvin, Shonita Skinner, and Susan Watson; other members Karen Walters, Tony Williams, and Sina Davis).

Published 6 issues of the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood e-New
s
(by e-mail on 2/9, 3/31, 6/20, 7/31, 10/25 and 10/26) and 3 hardcopy flyers (6/17, 8/1, & 10/24, delivered door-to-door to over 600 residences). Content & design by Mary Mullen; delivery by Thea Bach, Sharon Grant, Pam Flinn, Mary Mullen, Faith Cholvin, Kim Zinski & daughters Sage & Olivia, Elvice McAlpine, David Martin, Kent Seeker, Julie Lyne, Mary Somers, Patty Stockdale, Donna Sarafin, James Luscher, Tony William, Melanie Sax, & Rachel Potter.

Kept up a Facebook page. (Mary Mullen)

Our Treasurer Yannette Cole developed an all-new website www.dunnsmarsh.org <http://www.dunnsmarsh.org>  which required uncounted hours of her time.  It is now hosted through GoDaddy.

Held a neighborhood book and movie club that attracted 4-10 people monthly to discussions and potlucks. (Thea Bach)

Co-sponsored Make Music Madison with Prairie UU Society & provided  volunteers to help run the day, 6/21. (Mary Mullen, Yannette Cole, Elvice McAlpine, Faith Cholvin, Patty Stockdale). Neighborhood performers included Mary Mullen and Jesse Cole. Attendees for each act ranged up to 41 people, with an average of 30.  The community participated in a Maypole dance at the end of a beautiful day.  

            
 


Held Annual Picnic, August  5, which attracted over 55 people.  Attendees had a chance to chat with Co. Executive Joe Parisi and staff member Wes Sparkman, Fitchburg Mayor Steve Arnold, Alder Maurice Cheeks, and Alder Dorothy Krause. (Yannette Cole, Thea Bach, Cindy Harrington, Mary Mullen, Shonita Skinner)

Worked on relocating the  Little Free Library now at the corner of Lumley Road and Danbury Street, due to repeated vandalism. (Elvice McAlpine)


9 - Annual Meeting Notes

Although the annual meeting of the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association was not very well attended, members accomplished the necessary work.
 
Representatives to the Neighborhood Council were chosen, as detailed in previous articles.
 
People got a chance to say what they liked about the neighborhoood and what they thought the DMNA should work on during the year. Ideas filled a flipchart page.
 
Attendees learned that the organization is solvent, with an ending bank balance of $1,128.53 - $4 more than the starting balance of October 2015.  Most of our funding goes to communicating with the neighborhood.  Most of our income comes from dues, donations, and advertising.
 
A new by-law change was voted in with the purpose of helping the Council maintain a quorum.  During the past 2 years the Council had several meetings without a quorum due to low attendance.  The by-law change defines what is deemed a resignation:  “Three consecutive absences from Neighborhood Council meetings without valid excuse or without informing the President or Secretary of the Association, or five absences for any reason -- consecutive or not -- within a term of service, shall be deemed a resignation.” The language in italics is new.

We heard at length from our Madison Alder Maurice Cheeks about progress toward a grocery store in the neighborhood.  A market study has been completed.  The findings were that a small “corner store” or a store connected to some other attraction such as a neighborhood center would be most likely to be successful.  Putting a store in a “business district” might be another way to bring in customers.
 
Besides Alder Cheeks, 2 other elected representatives attended the meeting, Fitchburg Alder and County Supervisor Dorothy Krause, and County Supervisor Richard Kilmer.  Co. Sup. Krause represents the Fitchburg part of the neighborhood and Kilmer represents the Madison portion.  We thank all 3 representatives for taking the time to join us for our meeting.


10 - Keep Up with Us
Want to know what’s happening in the neighborhood and what the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association is doing?
There are 3 good ways to do so.

For day-to-day information, check out our Facebook page, Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association.

For a much broader picture, look at our website www.dunnsmarsh.org <http://www.dunnsmarsh.org>   There you can learn about our history, our bylaws, our publications, our parks and open space, the many bike trails, and about other community resources. We’ve been around since 1973!

Through the calendar on the home page and another separate calendar page where you can see whole months at a time, you can learn about meetings of the DMNA Council and of the Allied Community Co-op that is working on a grocery-buying club as well as on getting a grocery store.

There’s lots more, and lots of photos.  You can also join the DMNA and pay your voluntary dues online and find other volunteer activities.

The third way to keep up is to attend the monthly Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Council meetings.  They are held on the second Thursday of the month, 6:30 pm, at Prairie Unitarian Universalist Society, 2010 Whenona Drive.  (Enter on the Crawford Drive side.)  Any resident is welcome to attend.  The next meeting is December 8.

If you want the Council to take up a particular issue, it’s best to contact the president, Yannette (Janet) Cole, at 332-7003 or yfcole@gmail.com




-----------End of the DUNN’S MARSH NEIGHBORHOOD E-NEWS for 11/14/16

 


 
 













































 

Thursday, October 27, 2016

Liquor license Application in N'hood



 
                                                                                                            October 27, 2016
                                                                                                            E-News #2 this month

The DMN e-News and an occasional hard copy DMN News are published by the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association (DMNA) on an “as-needed” schedule.  The Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association, Inc. has been working to unite neighbors to solve mutual problems and promote fellowship among neighbors since 1973.  Our neighborhood is in Madison & Fitchburg.
               President & News contact:  Mary Mullen, mmullen4337@charter.net  298-0843
               Website: http://www.dunnsmarsh.org <http://www.dunnsmarsh.org>
              On Facebook:   
Type Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association into the Facebook search box.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
REMEMBER our DMNA Annual Meeting tonight, October 27, 2016, 6:30, at Prairie UU Society, 2010 Whenona Drive.  It starts with a free soup and sandwich meal.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Articles
1 - Meetings for New Liquor License at Zimmer’s Location

            (Attachment:  “1 alcohol license notice.jpg”)
2 - Petition Started to Oppose Liquor License
3 - Paper Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood News Gave WRONG Date for Election
4 - Vote Early!
5 - Madison Absentee Ballots Break All Records
6 - What’s on the Ballot?
7 - Free Lecture at Monona Terrace: THE WRIGHT DESIGN SERIES
NOTE:  All articles by Mary Mullen unless noted otherwise.  WARNING: This e-News was not proofread.
-------------------------------------------
 
LIQOUR LICENSE APPLICATION

1 - Meetings for New Liquor License at Zimmer’s Location

            (Attachment:  “1 alcohol license notice.jpg”)

We have just learned that Zimmer's Liquors store has been sold to a new owner and that owner wants to open his own liquor store in the building at 4217 West Beltline Highway.  Several meetings will be held to determine if the new owner will be issued a liquor license.  

Issues and actions related to this location and the new application will undoubtedly be discussed at the DMNA’s Annual meeting this Thursday, October 27, 6:30 pm, at Prairie UU Society, 2010 Whenona Drive.  Come to the meeting and let everyone know what you think.

We’ve been told that the new owner thinks it will be a breeze to get a license, but if people in the neighborhood all rise up, get petitions out, and attend all the meetings, liquor sales could be eliminated from this location.

There have been many, many complaints about issues related to liquor sales in the neighborhood.  Liquor bottles and cans are strewn all along the frontage roads and a block back from the frontage road and also into Marlborough Park, 4 blocks from the store.  People with paper bags covering their bottles are often seen walking into Marlborough Park.  Drunken people have passed out in residential yards nearby.

These are the 3 meetings that will be held by the City of Madison directly pertaining to the liquor license:

(1) Thursday, Nov. 3, 11:00 am, an "informational meeting" at the store, 4217 West Beltline.

(2) Wednesday, November 16, at 5:30 pm with the Alcohol License Review Committee, Municipal Building on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.

(3) Tuesday, December 6, , 6:30 pm, City-County Building on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., is the date the City Council is expected to make a decision on the license.

Your DMNA President has posted a message to Alder Maurice Cheeks informing him of this issue and mentioning that she is sure the neighborhood will be opposed to issuing a license to the new owner. Alder Cheeks is scheduled to attend our neighborhood association's meeting this Thursday, 6:30, at Prairie UU Society, 2010 Whenona Drive. This would be an opportunity to let him know what you think.

MANY people in the neighborhood should attend each meeting if the neighborhood wants to stop the new owner from getting a liquor license.  People may also favor the licence at this meeting.

We have been highly successful in getting the City of Madison to turn down 3 applicants for liquor licenses in the neighborhood in the past few years.  

The first two came in at about this time of year in 2009.  One was an application to sell alcohol at a restaurant at 4245 West Beltline Highway where Dream Bikes is now located. This would have been at a restaurant with sales and consumption only on the premises.  The second was an application to sell bottle goods and to serve alcohol at a to-be-established restaurant at 4265 West Beltline Highway, just 2 doors west of the first one.   That is the house at the corner of the Beltline Frontage Road and Danbury Street. Both were turned down after neighborhood opposition.

Two years later, November 2011, an application was made for a very large liquor store to be located in Madison Plaza - the shopping center where Lumber Liquidators, AutoZone, and Harbor Freight are. The address was 4611 Verona Road. Again, the Alcohol License Review Board turned down the application after strong neighborhood and elected representative opposition.

Phil Zimmer (owner of Zimmer's for 35 years) told me that he feels that the new owner bought the building specifically so he could toss out Zimmer's and put in his own liquor store.  Phil added that the new owner gave him an ultimatum of selling the business to him and selling all his stock as well - both as rock-bottom prices - "or else."  He was given one day to "think it over." He did sell, but he is very, very unhappy at how he was treated by the new owner of the building.

 
2 - Petition Started to Oppose Liquor License

Annette Shesman has started a petition opposing granting of a liquor license for 4217 West Beltline Highway.  If you are on Nextdoor Dunn’s Marsh, go to the posting “Liquor Store Petition” to contact her or sign the petition.
 
We will also have a petition at the Dunn’a Marsh Neighborhood Association’s Annual Meeting, Thursday, October 27, 6:30, at Prairie UU Society, 2010 Whenona Drive (enter on Crawford Drive).
 


VOTING

3- Paper Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood News Gave WRONG Date for Election

Dunn’s Marsh neighborhood residents.  I have a huge apology to make about the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood News flyer that you have probably received this past weekend. Would you believe that 2 of us looked at the calendar portion of the flyer and neither of us noticed that the wrong date was given for the preseidential election.  
 
The correct date for the presidential election is Tuesday, November 8 (not Nov. 18).
 

4 - Vote Early!
 
Remember that in Madison, you can vote using an in-person absentee ballot until November 4 at any library or at the City Clerk’s Office in the City County Building. Take your photo ID.
 
Fitchburg voters can vote early at the Fitchburg City Hall on Lacy Road.  Friday, November 4 is also the last date you can early vote there.
 

5 - Madison Absentee Ballots Break All Records
           
by Madison City Clerk
 
The City of Madison has already broken all of its absentee voting records with this election.
 
A total of 35,497 absentee ballots have been issued, 31,241 of which have been returned to be counted.  The previous record for absentee ballots issued was 32,012 in November 2008.  The previous record for absentee ballots returned to be counted was 29,199 in November 2012.
 
As of yesterday, 26,527 absentee ballots were cast in person.  The previous record was 18,752 absentees cast in person in November 2012.
 
The latest In-Person Absentee Voting numbers, as of yesterday [Oct. 25, 2016] are as follows.  [Editor has underlined libraries closest to the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood.]

Ashman: 3,510
Central: 2,328
Goodman: 710
Hawthorne: 1,329
Lakeview: 1,873
Meadowridge: 1,892
Monroe: 1,166
Pinney: 3,027
Sequoya:  4,768
Streets East: 548
Student Activity Center: 554
Union South: 760
Clerk’s Office 4,062
                                                           from e-mail from Madison City Clerk Maribeth Witzel-Behl

 

6 - What’s on the Ballot?  (Attachments:  “2 Madison ballot.jpg” & “3 Fitchburg ballot.jpg”)
 
Don’t be surprised when you get into the voting booth.   There’s way more than the Presidential candidates to vote for.
 
In both Fitchburg and Madison there U.S. Congressional candidates, State legislative candidates, and  County candidates.  Madison voters also have a school referendum.
 
Look at the attached ballots.
 
If you aren’t certain you are registered or you aren’t certain where you polling place is, go to https://myvote.wi.gov/en-us/
<file://localhost/en-us>


BONUS

7 - Free Lecture at Monona Terrace: THE WRIGHT DESIGN SERIES

Hip Hop Architecture: Exploring The Intersection of Music and Architecture
Presented by Michael Ford
 
November 17, 7:00pm
Monona Terrace Lecture Hall
 
Ford’s lecture highlights the intersection of architecture and hip hop culture through three interconnected realms: academic research, professional practice and media. The lecture will include the built environment’s link to the start of hip hop culture, while also exploring ways in which this musical genre contributes to the built environment. He will share his work with The Universal Hip Hop Museum in the Bronx, NY, and unique approaches to empowering underrepresented communities through innovative architectural education techniques.
 
Michael Ford, The Hip Hop Architect, is originally from Detroit, Michigan. He has worked as a designer at Hamilton Anderson Associates in Detroit and at Flad Architects in Madison, and is currently an instructor at Madison College in the Architecture Technology department. Ford has presented on hip hop architecture throughout the U.S., including the University of Pennsylvania, Carnegie Mellon University, and his alma mater, University of Detroit Mercy.
 
FREE ticket required for admission. Tickets are available subject to venue capacity and are issued on a first come first serve basis. If not sold out, tickets will be available at the event starting at 6:30pm.
 
Copy and paste this URL in your browser to sign up for free tickets:  https://www.eventbrite.com/e/wright-design-series-michael-ford-tickets-28888391958 <file://localhost/e/wright-design-series-michael-ford-tickets-28888391958>   [For some reason it does not work to click on the link.]
 
 
-----------End of the DUNN’S MARSH NEIGHBORHOOD E-NEWS for 10/27/16 ------


Tuesday, October 25, 2016

DMN News: THUR. free meal/mtg... more


 
 
 
                                                                                                
October 25, 2016
 
The DMN e-News and an occasional hard copy DMN News are published by the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association (DMNA) on an “as-needed” schedule.  The Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association, Inc. has been working to unite neighbors to solve mutual problems and promote fellowship among neighbors since 1973.  Our neighborhood is in Madison & Fitchburg.
               President & News contact:  Mary Mullen, mmullen4337@charter.net  298-0843
               Website: http://www.dunnsmarsh.org <http://www.dunnsmarsh.org>
              On Facebook:   
Type Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association into the Facebook search box.
     -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 
 
 
It’s Time!  (Attachments: “10/24/16 flyer Eng.jpg” & “10/24/16 flyer Sp.jpg”)
 
Yes, it’s that time again.  Time to gather for the annual Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association’s Annual Meeting.  Also, time to have a free meal together.  Yeah!
 
This year, we promise to be very disciplined about the time  -- and anyone and everyone can take responsibility for holding us to the printed agenda.
 
Come prepared to tell us one thing you like about our neighborhood and one thing you’d like to see the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood Association work on during the coming year.
 
There are two other major orders of business is to consider at this meeting:  a bylaw amendment and election of the Neighborhood Council.  
 
For the past 2 years we’ve had trouble getting a quorum at Council meetings.  The suggested bylaw amendment makes it clear that a Council member who shows a lack of ability or interest in attending meetings is automatically “resigned” from the Council.  We need to have Council members who can attend our meetings regularly, not just once in a while.
 
The new Council will be chosen from “caucuses” of  DMNA members from the 4 parts of the neighborhood.  Each area - Crawford, Belmar, Marlborough, and Allied - may choose up to 3 representatives.  Officers are chosen at the first Council meeting after the annual meeting.
--------------------------------

ADDITIONAL ARTICLES  
(All articles written by Mary Mullen unless noted otherwise in the byline)
 
VOTE
1 - Madison Voters May Absentee Vote at Any Madison Public Library
(Attachent: “1 pics election 8/9/16”)
2 - Fitchburg In-person Absentee Voting Hours

 
FOCUS ON THE NEIGHBORHOOD
3 - Beauty Everywhere
(Attachments:  “2 pics along the hy.jpg” & “3 pics seasons.jpg”)
4 - Pit Bull Pup Stolen, Then Retrieved Through Craigslist
5 - Little Free Library to Move

CITY AND COUNTY
6 - Madison Recycling Update
7 - Dane County Bicycle Wayfinding Project Explained
8 - Dane County Executive Parisi Talks About a Day Resource Center for the Homeless
------------------------------------------

VOTE

1 - Madison Voters May Absentee Vote at Any Madison Public Library
           
(Attachment: “1 pics election 8/9/16”)


Voting early in person by absentee ballot just got a lot easier.  After a court ruling that allowed municipalities to establish absentee voting locations beyond just the clerk’s office, the Madison Common Council decided to make Madison Public Libraries into absentee voting locations.  Voting at the libraries started Monday, September 26.  
 
The nearest libraries to the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood are Meadowood on Raymond Road, Sequoya at Tokay and Midvale Boulevard, and the Monroe Street Branch on Monroe Street.  Closer to the election - from October 31-November 4, voters may also fill out their ballots at Edgewood College - Wingra Commons and UW-Madison - Union South.
 
Voters must still show an approved picture ID such as their Wisconsin license or official Wisconsin ID or a number of other specific picture IDs.  
 
Voters who haven’t registered at their current address or who have changed their names may also register at the libraries.  Be sure to bring proof of where you live such as a utility bill or bank statement with your name and address on it. An ordinary letter is NOT proper proof.
 
The November 8 election for Madison voters in the neighborhood is in the Revival Ridge community room.

 
2 - City of Fitchburg In-Person Absentee Voting Hours

from Fitchburg

For NOVEMBER 8, 2016 GENERAL ELECTION
LOCATION:
            Fitchburg City Hall
                                                5520 Lacy Road
                                              Fitchburg, WI  53711

EARLY VOTING DATES/TIMES:         

October 24th - 28th
8:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
 
                                                  October 29th (Saturday)
                                                  9:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
 
October 31st - November 3rd
8:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
                      
November 4th
8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
 
QUESTIONS:                       Contact the Clerk’s Office at 608-270-4200



FOCUS ON THE NEIGHBORHOOD


3 - Beauty Everywhere (Attachments:  “2 pics along the hy.jpg” & “3 pics seasons.jpg”)

Summer and fall, doesn’t matter when, there’s beauty to be found in the neighborhood.  Take a look at the collages to get a flavor of the seasons.
 


4 - Pit Bull Pup Stolen, Then Retrieved Through Craigslist

On Saturday, September 10, a neighbor witnessed 3 young men steal their neighbor’s pitbull pup.  The neighbor put a notice up on Nextdoor Dunn’s Marsh, and the police were also informed about the theft.
 
Assuming that the thieves were hoping to make money selling the dog, the owner kept watch on Craigslist.  That was the ticket:  sure enough, the dog came up for sale there.  The owner arranged to meet the dishonest sellers - but not at his home. (Always a good idea to meet strangers at some public place instead of their home or yours)   Probably the police were also invovled.  
 
The pup is now back with his rightful owners.  A very happy ending to a sad story.


5 - Little Free Library to Move

The Little Free Library at Lumley and Danbury will soon be moved to a location along Crescent Road.
DMNA Council member Elvice McAlpine has been working with Rick Eilertson of Fitchburg on this move.
 
The photo shows Elvice on the left side of the library two other Council members, Thea Bach and Mary Mullen  on August 30.
 
We are hoping the move will take place soon, before the ground freezes.  
 
The move is necessary because at the current location, the LFL has been repeatedly vandalized.
 
                        
   
   

CITY AND COUNTY
 
6 - Madison Recycling Update

                       from Bryan Johnson, Madison Recycling Coordinator

Too Much Cardboard

One of the persistent questions we receive at the Streets Division is how to recycle more cardboard than will fit into the cart.  We’ve recently created a webpage  http://www.cityofmadison.com/streets/recycling/CardboardExcess.cfm that spells out the rules on how to handle this all too common issue in the age of online shopping.  
 
Household Batteries

Did you know that you can recycle your household batteries at our drop off sites? It’s true! We accept alkaline batteries, rechargeable batteries, lead acid batteries, and even lithium batteries.  However, there are two very important steps to follow before recycling your lithium batteries.
 
Lithium batteries come in many different shapes and sizes, but they are very easy to identify.  Lithium batteries are the small flat round batteries often found in watches and hearing aides.  The batteries that power our cameras, phones, and laptops are also often lithium.   Lithium batteries will be clearly labeled with the word "Lithium" or "Li-ion".
 
Here are the two steps to recycling these batteries.  First, we need folks to help us keep lithium batteries separate from the other battery types.  Each drop-off site has two battery containers – one for lithium batteries, and one for the alkaline and rechargeable. Please put the lithium batteries in the correct container.  There will be a large banner that will direct you which container to use for your batteries.  And there is staff available to help if it is not clear.  
 
The second important step would be to encase lithium batteries in clear tape prior to dropping them off.  Packing tape works best for this.  You can go to our website to see an example of how to tape up your batteries prior to recycling them.
 
Television Recycling

And finally, as a reminder, do not place televisions at the curb for collection. Televisions, and other electronics that are banned from the landfill, should be taken to one of our drop off sites for recycling.  Even electronics that are not banned from the landfill can be recycled at the drop off sites.
 
 Televisions should not be placed at the curb because they contain hazardous material, like lead and mercury.  If their screens are broken at the curb, that hazardous material could spill into the gutter then down the storm drains and into our lakes.  
 
To recycle your television, you need to obtain a $10 appliance sticker for each one. You will then need to bring the television to one of our drop-off sites.
 
To obtain the $10 sticker, you can stop by any city of Madison public library, the offices of either Streets Division location, or the Treasurer’s office.  You can even buy them online at www.madisonpay.com (Note: you will be mailed the sticker after the online purchase – there is no print on-demand option.).
 
 Keep in mind that the drop-off site hours change seasonally, so be sure you know if we’re open before coming out.  Right now, the drop-off sites are open 8:30am to 4:30pm seven days a week and until 8:00pm on Tuesdays and Thursdays.  
 
Questions?

As always, please contact us if you have any questions.  Our offices are open 7am to 4pm Monday to Friday.
 
If you live east of S. Park Street, and that includes the all of the isthmus, you should call 608-246-4532 for the east side Streets Division.
If you live west of S. Park Street, which includes the area around Camp Randall, you should call 608-266-4681.
 
You can also call the recycling office at 608-267-2626 or email me at streets@cityofmadison.com .  The website is located at http://www.cityofmadison.com/streets/refuse/
 
 
Thanks so much for your time.
 
-Bryan Johnson, Recycling Coordinator

                                    


7 - Dane County Bicycle Wayfinding Project Explained
                       from Madison Area Transportation Planning BoardAugust 2016 e-newsetter

Dane County Parks in partnership with the Madison Area Transportation Planning Board contracted with Toole Design Group to develop a county wide Bicycle Wayfinding Manual to guide the planning, design, and installation of wayfinding signage to assist bicyclists.
 
Bicycle wayfinding is intended to provide navigational assistance to make it easier to follow designated bicycle routes and reach important community destinations. Some bicycle routes may not be intuitive and wayfinding signage makes it simpler to use the route without needing to stop and consult a map. In addition, wayfinding helps bicyclists navigate to popular destinations such as shopping districts, schools, and parks that often are located just off a path or on-street route. Wayfinding can also encourage more people to bicycle especially if they were not aware of how close a destination is to their home or that there is a bicycle route to that destination.
 
The project also includes the development of seven implementation plans for the following bicycling corridors:
•        Lake Monona Loop
•        Capital City Trail from intersection with Lake Monona
Loop to intersection with Military Ridge Trail
•        University Avenue side path and bike lanes from Indian
Hills Park to CTH Q    Wayfinding signage developed for project.
 
 •       Cannonball Path from where Fitchburg’s signage ends to
Todd Drive
•        Military Ride Trail from intersection with Capital City Trail to Blue Mounds
•        Ice Age Junction Path from Military Ridge Trail to Flagstone Drive
 
The sample plans serve as a way for communities to see how various types of infrastructure will look when signed. The sample plans include a variety of typical situations including both urban and rural paths, side paths next to a bike lane, and other on street bicycle routes.
 
To further assist communities Dane County Parks and the Madison Area Transportation Planning Board will be offering a workshop implementing the Bicycle Wayfinding Manual and designing a corridor signage plan. The workshop will be held later this year. Interested attendees can email the Madison Area Transportation Board to be placed on a list to be notified when the workshop is scheduled. More information on the Dane County Wayfinding Plan is available on the Dane County Parks webpage.
 
from Madison Area Transportation Planning Board, August 2016  e-newsetter



8 - Dane County Executive Parisi Talks About a Day Resource Center for the Homeless
        from Dane County Executive Joe Parisi

We live in a compassionate, caring community.  It’s core to our quality of life and helps make our neighborhoods the very best they can be.

Homelessness is a real challenge facing too many families not only here, but in growing communities across the country.  What makes us unique is the way we are coming together to make a real difference for our neighbors.

With a site now secured, we are working diligently with the City, United Way, Catholic Charities and others to develop a new Day Resource Center to help individuals who fall on hard times get back on their feet and find employment.  This new one-stop-shop is slated to open next summer once remodeling is complete.

In addition to connecting those who are homeless with the vast array of services our community offers, it’s important we continually focus on what can be done to prevent homelessness before it occurs.

Too often families working hard to support their loved ones come upon a car repair or other significant expense making it hard to pay rent.  That’s why I created the “Eviction Prevention Program” through Dane County Joining Forces for Families – to stabilize living situations for families with children.  We are on track to help 200 families and 400 kids this year.
 
Given demand, I am doubling the dollars for this effort to $100,000.  

Working with the Salvation Army, the County is providing nearly $1 million for emergency shelter and to support a new expanded “Rapid Re-Housing” initiative to secure permanent housing for dozens of individuals.
 
Once housing is found, “Rapid-Re-Housing,” empowers homeless individuals with the training and skills to stay in those residences.

That’s why I’m putting more county dollars into case managers for the coming year, people who can work directly with those with housing challenges to get them into and keep them in affordable housing.


Together, we are making a real difference.
 

 
 
 
 
----------- End of the 10/24/16 issue of the Dunn’s Marsh Neighborhood e-News _______________
                                                     Thanks for reading.