Other top stories of ’12 include prison sale, drought

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Anna Sacco-Miller points out the latest election numbers as her mother-in-law, Cathy Miller, celebrates Nov. 6 at Mama Cimino’s in Dixon. Sacco-Miller, a Republican, defeated Lee County State’s Attorney Henry Dixon. (Alex T. Paschal/apaschal@saukvalley.com)
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4. Prison sale to feds will lead to 1,100 jobs, officials say

For years, northwestern Illinois awaited the opening of the Thomson prison. It didn’t happen.

A decade ago, the state built the facility in Thomson, a Carroll County town on the Mississippi River, but didn’t have the money to run it.

In October, after a year of political wrangling, state politicians announced that President Barack Obama had cleared the way for the government to buy the prison for $165 million, a number that officials said fell between two federal appraisals.

The president bypassed Congress, where some feared he would use the prison to house terrorists, using “unobligated” money to pay for it.

The purchase was good news for this economically distressed region. Officials said the prison will bring 1,100 jobs, employing people from throughout the Sauk Valley.

Officials have given no timetable for the prison’s opening.

5. An ‘unprecedented’ drought lingers

It was a warm, dry winter, so little moisture was in the soil when farmers planted their crops in the spring.

From there, things didn’t get any better.

The Sauk Valley suffered the hottest summer in years – with no rain day after day.

Crops started wilting. In mid-July, just 1 percent of the topsoil in northwestern Illinois had adequate moisture, which wasn’t much different from the rest of the state.

Jim Schielein of Dixon, a farmer since the mid-1980s, said in a July interview that the drought was “unprecedented” in his experience.

“I’ve got a couple of [corn] fields pretty much written off,” he said.

Some rain in August helped the soybean crop, but for much of the corn crop, the damage was done.

In December, meteorologist Eric Apel went to Sterling to tell farmers that he expected better farming weather in 2013.

But he made no guarantees, noting last year’s expectations.

“We predicted a cold and snowy winter, and we were wrong.”

6. Community shows support for injured servicemen

DIXON – This year was one in which the Sauk Valley rallied behind two injured servicemen from the area.

On Dec. 28, 2011, Lance Cpl. Adam Devine, a Marine from Dixon, was wounded by an improvised explosive device while on duty in Afghanisan. Devine, who was 21 at the time, lost both legs from above the knees.

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