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From YouTube: Bay County Board of Commissioners Meeting (7/19/22)
Description
0:15 - Call to Order
0:36 - Roll Call
1:06 - Invocation/Pledge of Allegiance
1:44 - Minutes (6/14/22)
1:57 - Citizen Input
2:09 - Petitions and Communications
2:12 - A1. Tribute to Essexville Garber Girls Softball Team
2:35 - A2. Dr. William Morrone, Medical Examiner - Medical Examiner Data on Accidents, Suicides, Overdoses and Natural Deaths in Bay County Presentation
36:04 - Reports/Resolutions of Committees
44:41 - Reports of County Officials/Departments - County Executive
47:05 - Unfinished Business - Appointment of Frances DeWyse to Bay Co. DHHS Board
49:45 - New Business
49:49 - Miscellaneous
53:08 - Announcements/Appointments
53:44 - Adjournment
A
A
Any
discussion
on
the
motion-
all
those
in
favor
say:
aye
all
right,
citizen
imports,
a
citizen
input,
any
citizen
inputs,
all
right,
close
citizen
input,
petitions
and
communications.
We
have
a
tribute
to
essexfield
garber
girls,
softball
team.
We
have
the
resolution,
but
they
were
not
able
to
make
it
today.
So
I
think
we're
going
to
defer.
A
E
E
So
I
hope
to
get
through
maybe
about
18
or
19,
slides
in
10
or
15
minutes,
and
then
we'll
take
questions
always
give
a
tribute
to
my
mom
and
dad
and
robert
frost
was
at
the
kennedy
inauguration
he's
the
greatest
poet
of
the
20th
century
and
he
believed
in
being
a
little
bit
of
a
stinker.
So
I
kind
of
know
which
side
I
lie
on.
Here's
the
most
important
thing:
where
are
things
happening
and
where
do
people
die?
E
E
Sixty-Seven
percent
of
all
medical
examiner
deaths
are
coming
from
the
city
and
the
rest
come
from
townships
and
the
county
pinconnect
colin
essexville
monger
and
our
linwood
monitor.
I-75
accidents
are
separated,
that's
usually
michigan
state
police
and
saginaw
bay
incidents.
E
If
we
look
at
the
total
number
of
deaths,
we
look
from
2016
to
2021
and
we
can
see
that
the
number
of
deaths
increase
in
our
community
by
three
four
hundred
and
it
plateaus
off,
so
that
in
the
last
year
the
lockdown-
we
really
didn't,
have
any
increased
deaths,
but
you
can
guarantee
because
of
poverty
and
the
trend
of
public
health
centralization
and
not
meeting
certain
needs
in
society.
Inflation
more
people
are
going
to
die
and
they're
dying
all
across
every
county.
Deaths
are
going
up
and
autopsies
are
going
up.
E
E
20
20
data
is
green,
2021
data
is
gray
and
it's
pretty
much
up
until
november
december.
That's
a
lot
of
stuff
going
on
when
the
weather
changes,
and
then
this
year,
karen
meek,
was
good
enough
to
get
that
fresh
data
out
to
me
the
first
six
months
of
this
year,
gold
bars
are
2022
and
things
are
pretty
much
following
the
same
chronological
pathways
for
cremation
permits.
E
If
we
look
at
the
total
number
of
permits
versus
the
total
number
of
deaths,
you
see
that
cremation
permits
are
rising.
We
did
not
measure
cremation
permits
officially
prior
to
2019,
so
there's
no
data
there,
but
they're
just
going
to
go
up.
We
went
from
40
10
years
ago
to
50
seven
years
ago
to
sixty
to
seventy
percent.
In
the
last
two
years,
cremations
will
be
eighty
percent
in
the
next
two
or
three
years,
because
the
prohibitive
costs
of
burial-
I
just
want
you
to
know
that
we
have
to
manage
the
deceased.
E
Not
just
do
autopsies
and
I
probably
get
about
600
calls
out
of
1700
deaths.
The
rest
go
to
hospice
hospital
physicians
that
are
taking
care,
hospitalists,
internists,
and
of
that
that
green
bar
is
101
autopsies
for
this
last
year,
2021
and
we
managed
310
bodies
coming
in
to
storage,
in
addition
to
our
101
and
where
that
ends
up
being
really
important
is
when
we
switched
over
from
mclaren
to
medstar
mclaren
transported
all
of
our
bodies.
E
Pro
bono
medstar
is
going
to
charge
us
and
it
would
not
be
a
bad
idea
if
joel
and
I
worked
out
secure
transportation
for
the
deceased
at
a
more
cost,
effective
rate
than
medstar,
and
that
might
be
a
future
meeting
just
to
let
you
know
how
that
happens.
E
E
It
says
it's
really
one
percent
in
2020
that
was
a
bay
county
sheriff
case
just
one
and
in
2021
you
can
see
that
accidents
still
present
as
the
dominant
form
of
deaths
going
to
autopsy
and
natural
deaths,
maintain
their
percentage
and
the
homicide
in
2021
was
bay
city,
public
safety,
not
the
county,
but
we
just
had
one.
I
think
that's
a
good
thing
that
this
is
a
relatively
safe
place
to
live,
and
people
should
know
that
both
drug
deaths
are
related
to
drug
or
both
homicide
deaths
are
related
to
drug
activity.
E
E
Which
means
we
probably
need
a
little
bit
more
support
and
behavioral
health
and
primary
care,
surveillance
and
screening.
What
are
some
of
the
natural
deaths
that
come
through
our
county
I'll
just
highlight
2021.
The
differences
are
not
that
much.
It's
the
same
thing.
Every
year,
33
coronary
artery
disease,
33,
hypertension,
copd,
pneumonia,
pulmonary
disease,
alcoholic
liver
disease
is
a
natural
death,
even
though
it's
related
to
substance,
use
and
pancreas
comes
up
and
we
have
the
same
kind
of
thing.
E
Here's
the
important
part.
If
we
break
down
accidents
in
2020,
we
have
a
drowning
fire.
Inhalation
asphyxia
with
those
are
usually
child,
death
investigations
and
blunt
force
for
motor
vehicle,
but
the
dominant
force-
and
this
is
you
know,
a
slap
your
hand
moment.
Overdoses
are
dominating
our
accidental
deaths.
So
can
we
get
the
state
to
help,
invest
in
behavioral,
health
and
substance
use
disorder?
The
answer
is
we
need
to,
and
this
is
2021
in
or
2021
overdoses
go
up
even
more.
E
E
So
we
know
these
numbers
are
real.
Some
counties
may
hide
their
overdoses
because
they
want
more
people
to
move
there
and
think
that
you
know
it's
it's
a
nicer
place,
but
then
you
don't
get
the
treatment.
You
really
have
to
recognize
this.
So
36
out
of
41
of
the
drug
overdose
deaths
88
are
fentanyl,
heroin
is
gone,
heroin
doesn't
exist
anymore,
and
if
we
break
down
our
drug
overdose
deaths
in
2021
by
age,
you
can
see
this
long
block
from
16
to
20
out
to
61
to
40
years
old.
E
E
E
We
could
predict
what
was
going
to
be
coming.
So
we
are
a
sentinel
county,
and
this
data
reinforces
that.
So,
let's
just
look
at
drug
deaths
for
our
county,
because
there's
such
a
huge
percentage,
you
can
see
that
they've
naturally
gone
up,
except
for
that
strange
year,
2016
when,
under
the
previous
administration
there
was
a
chief
medical
officer
that
signed
one
prescription
for
everybody
in
the
state
to
get
narcan.
E
E
E
Fentanyl
is
everywhere
and
the
hard
part
is
it's
everywhere
in
america,
and
nobody
really
has
a
good
answer
that,
because
it's
really
dangerous,
but
we
again
are
a
sentinel
county.
We
show
america
what's
happening,
we're
a
very
good
view.
A
cross-section,
and
here
you
can
see,
what's
happening
in
america.
The
blue
line
is
prescriptions.
E
They
blunt
and
start
falling.
The
dark
blue
line
is
heroin,
it
goes
up
so
far
and
then
it
starts
falling
and
the
purple
line
is
fentanyl.
It
just
takes
up
and
it's
out
of
control
and
it
represents
88
to
90
percent
of
all
drug
overdose
deaths,
and
one
of
the
statistics
coming
out
of
the
national
center
for
health
statistics
is
that
for
every
single
drug
death
there
are
10
people
that
need
to
be
in
treatment.
E
32
people
get
admitted
to
the
emergency
room
and
130
people
that
are
actively
abusing
and
there's
825
that
are
non-medical
users.
So
having
you
know,
like
40
overdose
deaths,
the
numbers
that
it
it
impales
on
us.
It
is
it's
just
it's
painful
on
how
much
that
happens.
So
where
does
this
is
the
advantage
of
I
work
with
other
counties,
I'm
also
the
deputy
for
midland
county
and
the
chief
medical
examiner
for
tuscola
and
araneck,
so
I'm
able
to
take
and
dr
bush
and
I
are
on
friendly
speaking
terms
in
saginaw,
so
we
share
data.
E
So
in
general
the
two
main
things
I
don't
want
to
read.
This
whole
thing
is
too
much
here.
Our
morgue
is
easily
overwhelmed
and
sometimes
regularly
this
weekend
we
had
eight
bodies.
We
were
juggling
for
autopsy
on
monday
morning.
E
Just
don't
claim
the
deceased
and
we
have
to
figure
out
what
to
do,
and
it's
not
easy.
So
this
entire
report
is
written
as
a
report
and
joel,
and
I
will
publish
this
in
three
weeks
on
the
health
department.
Web
page
and
you'll
have
all
this
data
I'll
probably
make
maybe
eight
or
nine
paper
copies
I'll,
give
one
one
to
executive,
barsha,
one
to
sheriff
one
to
public
safety
and
leave
a
couple
others
with
joel
and
karen
mika.
But
this
entire
report
will
be
on
the
web.
E
E
Every
fentanyl
death
here
is
not
prescription
fentanyl,
it
is
illegal
drug
pipeline
fentanyl,
and
that
is
where
america
is
suffering
today
is
heroin
was
just
too
expensive
and
I
mean
you
have
to
grow
it.
You
have
to
boil
it.
You
have
to
acetylate
it.
Then
you
have
to
dry,
it
fentanyl,
you
just
make
it
a
lab
and
it's
30
to
100
times
more
potent
than
heroin
every
fentanyl
death.
When
you
look
at
that
purple
column,
that's
a
hundred
percent
bootleg
imported
fentanyl
in
the
drug
pipeline
with
dealers.
Does
that
help
tremendously.
F
Okay,
now
you
talked
about
mental
health,
tying
it
all
into
all
these
deaths,
and
I'm
a
believer
that
with
the
demise
or
the
decline
of
the
middle
class
over
the
last
40
years,
where
people
could
have
left
high
school
gotten
a
job
married,
their
high
school
sweetheart
bought
a
home
and
part
of
the
social
fabric
of
a
community
of
the
school
system
that
doesn't
exist,
but
that
hasn't
existed
in
the
numbers
it
did
40
years
ago.
So
people,
you
know
correct
me.
F
If
so
people
aren't
living
the
american
dream
over
the
last
four,
as
many
people
aren't
living
the
american
dream
that
over
the
last
40
years,
therefore
they
you
know
they're,
not
happy
they're,
they
get
depressed,
and
when
you
get
depressed,
maybe
you
self-medicate,
and
I
think
a
lot
of
it
is
due
to
the
fact
that
over
the
past
40
years,
it's
been
the
powers
to
be
that
wanted
to
outsource
jobs.
And
I
know
technology
has
reduced
the
number
of
jobs
as
well,
but
somehow
we
got
to
give
people
the
opportunity
to
live.
F
E
I
think
there
are
two
words
that
you
used
twice
self-medicate.
It
is
a
totally
foreign
concept
from
something
20
years
ago
that
you
would
trade
prescription
drugs
with
friends,
family
and
strangers.
That
just
didn't
happen.
That
is
now
so
casual
because
it's
too
hard
to
get
in
to
see
your
doctor,
your
friends
know
where
all
the
illegal
drugs
are,
and
why
would
I
wait
four
weeks
for
prozac
to
kick
in
when
I
could
do
fentanyl
or
methamphetamine
and
feel
good
in
about
five
minutes,
and
that
mindset
is
real
people
in
medical
school.
E
E
This
is
just
insane
that
it's
going
going
on
this
way
and
the
introduction
of
fentanyl.
Forgive
me
for
sounding
too
liberal
on
this.
We
had
heroin
for
100
years,
and
we
never
saw
deaths
like
this.
I
don't
want
to
ever
be
chastised
for
saying
heroin
was
soft
or
heroin
was
safe
because
it
wasn't
but
people
who've
used
heroin
for
10
15
20
25
years
they
get
fentanyl
and
they
die.
It's
just.
There's
no
control
and
it's
everywhere.
E
Self-Medication
is
the
problem.
We
have
to
be
able
to
address
that
in
mental
health
and
primary
care,
and
I
don't
see
us
going
in
that
direction.
Unless
we,
we
are
not
going
to
solve
this
problem
in
the
margins
of
a
report,
we
need
to
re
overhaul
the
model
of
how
we're
reaching
out
to
these
people
start
reaching
out
to
them
in
high
school
reach
out
to
them
at
work.
You
know
we
have
a
lot
of
screening
on
safe
drug
drug
use.
E
E
We
need
to
start
screening
the
depression
and
drug
use,
and
sometimes
that
means
spending
money
for
drug
testing
in
primary
care
to
help
people
to
understand
where
they
are,
because
they
don't
always
tell
you
the
truth
when
you
ask
them
but
they're
looking
for
help,
there's
not
enough
places.
Now
I
can
tell
you
the
the
overdose
deaths
they're
higher
in
saginaw,
but
it's
a
higher
population
base.
We
see
what's
happening
in
america.
E
Fentanyl
is
disruptive
and
it's
fracturing
families,
and
it
is
so
toxic
right
now
that
even
on
scene,
our
officers
have
to
wear
double
gloves
or
thick
gloves,
and
our
officers
first
dose
of
narcan
is
for
them.
That's
how
dangerous
it
is.
So
thank
you
for
that.
The
two
most
important
words
you
said
self-medicate
and
he
said
it
twice.
F
F
Just
and
I'm
sure
you
know
with
joel,
you
guys
are
working
with
bayern
behavioral
health
and
we
put
together
some
different
programs,
especially
one
where
somebody
may
have
an
overdose
where
a
team
will
come
and
work
with
that
individual
to
try
to
get
them
the
help
that's
needed
so
that
they
don't,
you
know,
fall
back
in
the
same
pitfall
that
they
they've
gotten
themselves
into.
So
I
know
that
they're
working
on
different
programs,
I'm
trying
to
come
up
with
ways
of
helping
individuals
that
are,
are
looking
for
help
to
get
them
away
from
this.
E
Specific
model
you're
looking
at
is
called
rrt
or
qrt,
quick
response,
team
or
rapid
response
team,
and
the
information
is
let
out
of
ems,
that
there
was
an
overdose
with
a
per
certain
person
at
a
certain
house,
and
I
can
tell
you
that
chief
jacini
and
lori
zielkowski
go
to
the
homes
of
people
that
are
recently
overdosed
and
ask
them
for
help
in
this
qrt
model.
E
We
have
a
program,
I'm
also
in
shiawassee
county
with
one
of
my
clinics
that
the
day
somebody
overdoses
in
er,
they
start
them
on
two
days
of
suboxone
and
they
see
us
on
day.
Three.
We
enroll
them.
We
continue
prescribing
and
we
get
counseling
once
a
week
and
we've
brought
overdose
deaths
down
in
shiawassee
county
because
we
begin
treatment
in
the
emergency
room
to
this
day.
E
E
Yes-
and
I
was
up
talking
airneck
and
they
wanted
to
start
with
a
drug
court
yep,
because
part
of
this
is
interrupting
the
crime
drug
cycle,
and
that's
where
these
drugs
spread
so
fast
like
wildfire,
is
that
people
are
drawn
because
of
poverty
into
questionable
activities
and
the
crime
drug
cycle.
If
we
can
get
into
the
drug
court,
that
would
really
help.
I
think,
judge.
F
E
G
E
In
the
beginning,
people
were
experimenting
with
it
on
the
web,
but
the
da
can
follow
that
and
they
show
up
to
your
house
and
they
shut
it
down
the
d.a
interrupted
because
it
has
to
be
paid
for
and
there's
a
lot
of
accountants
that
work
there
and
it's
easy
crime
that
way.
The
deaths
that
we're
seeing
are
the
synthetic
fentanyl
that
we
know
is
being
made
in
southeast
asia,
china,
some
of
it
in
india
and
it's
it
just
became
cheaper
than
heroin.
E
It's
more
dangerous
and
we
see
the
end
result
here,
but
we
show
exactly
the
highest
age
range
of
what's
dying
when
we
say
that
the
cdc
says
you're
likely
to
die
of
an
overdose
accident
in
that
age
range
in
the
pink
box.
Eighty
percent
of
that
is
the
synthetic
fentanyl.
That's
bootlegged
into
the
drug
pipeline.
That's
not
accidents
as
in
well,
I
didn't
know
what
it
was
doing.
That's
people
using
drugs
because
they've
been
their
brains,
have
been
hijacked.
I
So
I
apologize
for
being
late.
So
if,
if
you
talked
about
this,
I
would
have
missed
it,
but
so
you,
you
shared,
I
believe,
some
thoughts
on
addressing
it
after
someone
od's,
but
a
couple
questions:
what
can
we
as
a
community
do
to
prevent
that
or
address
it
before
it
gets
to
that
point,
and
then
what
happens
between
the
20
year
olds
to
the
20
something
year
olds
that
use
of
the
drugs
increases
so
much.
E
E
E
E
E
We
need
to
put
those
messages
into
junior
highs,
middle
schools,
high
schools
and
colleges
that
drug
use
is
not
safe
and
if
you're
involved
in
that
the
signs
are
you're
out
of
control.
It's
going
to
affect
your
job
you're,
going
to
end
up
in
jail.
The
number
one
risk
factor
for
a
fatal
overdose
is
a
previous
non-fatal
overdose
and
who
who's
those
people-
those
people.
E
E
E
You
know
houses
of
faith
we
need
to
reach
out.
This
is
not
those
guys
over
their
problem.
You
know
all
sorts
of
people
that
are
stuck
on
substances,
you
just
don't
know
which
ones
they
are
through
that's
before
it
gets
that
bad
middle
schools,
high
schools,
churches,
everything
primary
care
ob,
so
I
hope
that
helps
it.
E
We
need
to
open
up
not
to
get
that
non-fatal
overdose
means
reaching
out
before
that.
So,
but
I
hope
this
data
is
helpful
and
I,
like
I
say
I
I
think
we're
really
safe
place.
I
I
love
this
county,
we're
a
sentinel
that
is
with
an
s
s
ent,
not
f,
we're
a
sentinel
county.
We
show
america
where
they're
going
and
we
can
make
a
difference.
A
I
J
Yes
and
no
things
have
changed
over
the
course
of
years,
the
years
where
they
are
capped
at
a
500,
000
balance,
and
so
I
can
talk
to
them
about
this.
I.
J
F
F
Because
the
more
because
this
this
will
eliminate
all
the
money
that
we
have
so
if
they
could
come
up
with
some
money,
then
we
would
have
more
money
to
help
somebody
somewhere.
Maybe
it
could
be
with
shauna's
program
or
I
mean
mr
prince's
program,
but
is
it
something
that
we
may
want
to
check
out.
A
Any
more
discussion,
so
I'd
be
referred
back
to
administration
for
check
on
other
funds.
Yes,
okay,
any
more
discussion,
all
those
in
favor
say
aye,
all
right,
auburn's,
still
looking
for
a
lift
station
by
the
way
that
was
after
meeting
last
night,
auburn
has
requested
a
lift
station.
I've
told
him
we're
not
doing
much
infrastructure
work
so.
F
I
D
C
C
C
C
D
C
C
C
L
L
F
Tiffany
you're
doing
a
great
job.
How
many
more
we
got.
A
L
A
G
Not
a
lot
of
stuff,
but
I
will
mention
that
at
the
veterans
committee
today,
mr
leonard
norman
gave
his
report
on
and
updated
us
on
the
work
that
he's
doing
to
identify
all
of
the
veterans
graves
in
bay
county.
So
far,
we've
got
most
of
the
most
of
the
smaller
cemeteries
done
with
2
357.
G
Graves
from
civil
war
all
the
way
to
to
peace
time
to
this
year
and
he's
doing
a
great
job
and
the
four
largest
cemeteries
are
yet
to
be
done.
He
started
north
and
worked
his
way
down.
He
gave
a
comprehensive
report
and
he's
doing
a
great
job.
I
don't
know
if
craig
would
want
to
add
anything
to
that,
but
also
I
just
wanted
to
mention.
G
I
know
that
commissioner
johnson
is
always
very
proud
of
the
accomplishments
and
accolades
by
the
athletes
in
his
part
of
the
county
and
john
glenn
high
school
had
their
pom
pom
squad
was
featured
on
america's
most
wanted.
That
was
just.
G
Yeah,
but
I
I'd
say:
we're:
we've
got
a
lot
of
reasons
to
be
proud
of
our
young
people
in
bay,
county,
they're,
absolutely
they're,
bringing
distinction,
and,
I
think,
a
lot
of
accolades
to
our
county
and
so
whether
they're
champion
athletes
or
whether
they're
pom-pom
folks
at
the
national
exposure.
That's
tremendous
so
just
want
to
mention
that,
and
also
say
that
mr
norman's
doing
a
great
job,
and
we
appreciate
the
state
grant
that
we
got
the
paid
for
salary
to
to
identify
all
of
these
veterans
graves.
K
Mr
chair,
the
board
had
requested
that
I
look
into
the
incompatible
public
offices
act
to
determine
whether
or
not
mr
wise
would
be
able
to
serve
in
this
position
if
she
was
appointed
by
the
board.
There
are
three
ways
that
someone
can
be
disqualified
from
serving
in
two
incompatible
offices.
One
is
if
that
one
office
subordinates
itself
to
the
other.
K
The
second
method
is
that
there's
a
supervision
of
one
public
office
by
another,
and
the
third
is,
if
there's
a
breach
of
duty
of
public
office,
this
appointment
to
the
dha
s
board
would
not
constitute
a
conflict
under
the
first
two
provisions
of
this
statute.
There
is
a
possibility
that
it
could
constitute
a
conflict
under
the
third
provision
of
the
statute.
K
K
However,
at
some
time
in
the
future,
if
she
is
asked
to
do
something
such
as
sign
a
contract,
negotiate
a
contract
between
those
two
entities
or
do
something
such
as
assess
a
special
assessment
district
on
the
property
where
the
medical
care
facility
is
located,
she
can't
recuse
herself
from
that
vote.
She
would
just
have
to
remove
herself
from
one
of
those
offices
and
resign
from
one
of
those
offices.
K
So
with
that
understanding
in
the
appointment
process-
she's,
okay,
right
now-
but
at
some
point
in
time
something
may
come
up
where
she
might
have
to
actually
resign
from
that
position.
A
I
A
copy
of
the
pin
conning
sesquicentennial
book
that
they
put
together
in
honor
of
its
150th
birthday
party,
my
dad's
in
it
actually,
but
it's
it's
really
well
done,
and
it
goes
through
the
history
of
pink
on
avian,
how
it
got
there
where
we
are
today.
There
are
some
order,
forms
of
him
in
here
if
anyone's
interested,
but
they
are
asking
that
you
order
by
august
1..
So
this
is
the
county's
copy.
F
Thank
you
so
jim
mentioned
about
the
palms
from
john
glenn
they're
actually
going
to
be
on
tim
lane.
They
need
a
plaque
so
just
to
make
sure
that
I
would
encourage
everyone
to
watch
and
beat
on
a
chest
on
how
proud
we
are
of
them.
So
thank
you.
A
C
Another
announcement-
yes,
yes,
sir,
all
right
so
just
to
give
sort
of
like
we
had
set
up
the
resolution
for
the
essex,
build
garbage,
softball
team
to
be
able
to
come
in
here
and
be
recognized
and
they
were
all
excited
about
it,
and
then
they
realized
after
they
got
all
excited
that
about
nine
of
the
members
were
going
to
be
busy
at
a
volleyball
camp,
that's
out
of
town.
C
So
we
wanted
to
make
sure
that
we
moved
that
to
august
9th
to
be
able
to
go
ahead
and
get
more
of
the
ladies
here
and
their
coaches
to
be
able
to
honor
them
appropriately.
So
just
wanted
to
go
ahead
and
make
that
clear,
so
they're
very
excited
to
be
here
just
wanted
to
make
sure
that
we
let
everybody
know
that
they
were
that
they
wanted
to,
but
it
just
wouldn't
work
out
today.
C
I
also
wanted
to
go
ahead
and
let
everybody
know
about
the
munger
potato
festival
not
like
anybody
has
to
like
their
sounds
all
over
the
place,
but
the
mugger
potato
festival
is
coming
up
thursday
july
28th
through
sunday,
the
31st
all
kinds
of
great
activities
that
you
get
used
to.
Of
course,
you've
got
the
you
know:
you've
got
the
figure.
Eight
derby
you've
got
the
demolition
derby
that
they
do
there
they've
got
they've
got
the
food
tent.
C
That
is
back
and
it's
being
run
and
sponsored
by
central
high
school,
their
booster
group,
their
athletic
group
and
kids
day
activity
on
saturday
july
30th
in
the
morning
at
9,
30
a.m,
they'll
be
doing
some
kids
activities
and
and
of
course
the
entertainment
tent
got
music
every
single
night,
but
sunday,
the
kowalski
brothers,
polka
band
is
going
to
be
there
who
doesn't
like
a
good
pokeman
right.
C
So
if
you
get
the
opportunity
go
ahead
and
enjoy
the
festivities
and
monger,
I'm
sure
they'd
be
happy
to
have
everybody
there
that
they
can
get
there.
H
Going
on
now
from
to
the
30th
of
this
month,
we
have
the
abyssal
adoption
event
going
on,
so
dogs
are
25,
kittens
are
20
and
adult
cats
are
five
so
step
out
and
see
us.
We
have
plenty.
A
And
I
have
one
announcement
for
all
you
public
servants
out
here
and
tv
land
are
here.
Your
your
campaign.
Finance
reports
are
due
by
friday
at
four
o'clock.
If
not
they'll
come
looking
for,
you
well
they'll
find
you
but
four
o'clock
today,
any
public
servants
that's
running
for
office
file.
Those
reports,
that's
all
any
more.
D
A
Appointments,
no
appointment,
sorry
got
to
do
those
20
22
appointments
october
land
bank
authority,
one
township
representative,
three
year
term,
expiring,
ron
campbell
department
of
health
and
human
services
board
of
directors,
one
through
your
term
kim
mejic.
Let's
pronounce
your
name
wrong
december
veterans
affairs
committee,
one
four-year
term
expiring,
marilyn
lazar
department
on
aging
advisory
committee.
Four
two
year
terms
expiring
this
district's
two
four
six
and
at
that's
all
now
we
could
ask
for
I'm
working
here,
support
any
discussion.