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A
SSOCIATED
N
EWSPAPERS OF
M
ICHIGAN
P
AGE
5
May 29, 2014
Live-In Property manager, 12
unit building in Wayne . Job
requires leasing and mainte-
nance. Must pass criminal
background check and have
vehicle. 734-427-7545
Drivers: Carter Express – CDL-
A. Dedicated Routes Romulus,
MI to Smyrna, TN
Average 2695 miles/wk Solos
up to 37 cpm to start.
Dedicated Routes $195 per
day Romulus to Anderson, IN.
Home Weekly. No Slip Seat.
No Touch, Newer Equipment.
(855) 219-4838
Holland’s Detroit Terminal in
Romulus, MI is hiring FT Local
& FT Regional drivers. Drivers
must be 21 yrs old, having a
CDLA w/ hazmat & tanker w/ 1
yr or 50k miles experience.
Apply online: www.hollandre-
gional.com/careers. Company
paid health insurance for full
time drivers after probation.
E E O / A A E
Minorities/Females/Persons
with
Disabilities/Protected
Veterans
1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments.
$450-$550. Spacious
Middlebelt Rd-Inkster
248-789-2335
4 appliances white, washer,
dryer, refrigerator, stove. Great
condition. $700. 734-419-
6060.
Wayne -
SLEEPING RM
$100/wk + $325 Sec. Dep.
Furnished, util. incl.,
1 person only.
734-506-8530
ADOPTION
Adopt: Active, loving woman
wishes to complete her fami-
ly through adoption. A life-
time of love, opportunity and
learning awaits. Expenses
paid. Call Diana 1-866-997-
7676 (MICH)
HELP WANTED-
TRUCK DRIVER
CDL-A Drivers Needed! Up to
$5,000 Sign-on Bonus & $.56
CPM Dedicated and OTR
Great Miles & Time Off!
Benefits, 401k, EOE. Call 7
days/week
866-950-4382
GordonTrucking.com (MICH)
Owner Operators CDL-A Up
to $200,000 a year. Out 2
weeks. Home as many days
as needed. Lease Purchase
Available. Sign on bonus.
855-803-2846 (MICH)
Regional Flatbed O/Os MI-
IN-OH
$2,000
Sign-on
Bonus, $3500-$4000/week
Average. Paid Tolls/Scale
Tickets, Free Trailers/Plate
Program, Comdata/DD Wkly
Settlements CDL-A 1 Yr.
Experience 888-888-7996
(MICH)
ON THE ROAD TO A
BRIGHTER
FUTURE!
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Truck
Driving
School. Class starts every 4
weeks. Next class starts
June
23rd.
w w w . m i d w e s t a . c o m
Financing Available:1-800-
377-5567,
906-789-6311
(MICH)
INSTRUCTION, SCHOOLS
MEDICAL
BILLING
TRAINEES
NEEDED!
Medical Office Asst. training
at SC Train gets you job
ready! NO EXPERIENCE
NEEDED! HS Diploma/GED
& PC/Internet needed! 1-877-
253-6495 (MICH)
MISCELLANEOUS
This classified spot for sale.
Advertise your product or
recruit an applicant in more
than 130 Michigan newspa-
pers! Only $299/week. Call
this paper or 800-227-7636
www.cnaads.com (MICH)
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IF YOU USED THE BLOOD
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fered internal bleeding, hem-
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ization or a loved one died
while
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tled to compensation. Call
Attorney Charles H. Johnson
1-800-535-5727 (MICH)
STEEL BUILDINGS
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insured-2x6 Trusses-45 Year
Warranty Galvalume Steel-19
Colors-Since 1976-#1 in
Michigan-Call Today 1-800-
292-0679. (MICH)
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121. Autos Wanted
TO PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD CALL 734-467-1900 OR EMAIL ADS@JOURNALGROUP.COM
Classified
N
ORTHVILLE
- P
LYMOUTH
Trustee protests new minutes policy, spending by board
Women’s charity kickball tournament set for Sunday
Plymouth Township Trustee
Bob Doroshewitz questioned a
change in a 26-year-old policy
regarding official minutes of board
meetings.
At the meeting of the trustees
May 13, Doroshewitz said he want-
ed to revisit the question of striking
public comments from the official
meetingminutes.
Supervisor Richard Reaume
responded that he had “checked
with the townships' association”
and “the AG (attorney general) says
we don't have to include comments
or names.”
“That didn't answer my ques-
tion. For 26 years, when members
of the public come to give com-
ments, sometimes critical, some-
times favorable, the public has
been identified and the comment
recorded.
“Some time ago, this public lost
their names and this time there
are no comments. The minutes
only say the supervisor invited the
public to give comments. I think it's
insulting to people who prepare
for the meeting and stand up in
front of the community,” he said.
Doroshewitz then proposed a
motion that meeting minutes
include comments and questions
fromthe public.
That motion failed and the new
board policy of not answering citi-
zens questions during the meeting
and not including the citizens' com-
ments in the official minutes will
continue.
Doroshewitz also questioned
the procedures of approving credit
card bills used by township
employees and officials.
He said he went back six
months to look at the credit card
charges. One of the charges he
asked about was a December, 2012
charge for $355 to the State Bar of
Michigan.
Township Clerk Nancy
Conzelman said the expense was
for her “bar association fee.”
“You think that's proper?”
Doroshewitz asked? “That the tax-
payers pay the clerk's bar fee?Why
isn't the township paying my bar
fee?”
Reaume responded that there
are a number of membership and
association feeds paid by the town-
ship for department heads and
officials in the township.
Local attorney John Stewart
also spoke to the board regarding
the refusal of township Treasurer
Ron Edwards to mail a tax bill to
the home of a 69-year-old widowed
township resident. As the citizens
comments section of the meeting
was about to close, Stewart again
took to the podium and reintro-
duced himself as a “long-time
township resident, a former
trustee, a former state representa-
tive, a local attorney, and I pay my
own bar fees,” he said, to loud
applause fromthe audience.
“We can do better. All across
Michigan people are looking at this
(township) and your conduct is
impacting onmy property values.
“Shame on you for what's going
onhere,” he said to the trustees.
Last year, they generated about
$10,000 for Northville Civic
Concern, a group that helps feed
the underprivileged in the commu-
nity through the local foodbank.
This year, they hope to kick that
total up evenhigher.
The 2nd Annual Main Street
League Women's Kickball
Tournament is planned for noon
until 5 p.m. Sunday, June 1 at Ford
Field in downtown Northville,
according to organizers Lauren
Romeo and JenniferMullan.
The tournament will feature six
teams of 10-15 high-spirited and
civic-minded women who will com-
pete in the kickball games to raise
funds and “kick hunger to the
curb.”
Northville Civic Concern helps
more than 150 local families in
need, the organizers said, and they
hope to provide as much help as
possible to the non-profit service.
“The Main Street League mis-
sion is to gather like-minded volun-
teers within Northville and sur-
rounding areas who pool their
resources, time, expertise and cre-
ativity to support non-profit organi-
zations and empower others to
become agents of change,” the
organizers said in a prepared state-
ment.
The tournament will also fea-
ture activities for children, a
lemonade stand and snacks will be
available for purchase for a small
donation.
The event is free and open to the
public.
Ford Field is located at 151
North Griswold in downtown
Northville.
Wine Warriors
Celebrating their new reality cable
TV show at E. G. Nick's in
Plymouth last week were the exec-
utive producers of Wine Warriors, a
half-hour show based on the chal-
lenges Michigan wine producers
face in growing, producing, bot-
tling and selling their products. As
promotional taping for the show
went on all evening, show produc-
ers Marco Tabone, left, Gerry
Venittelli, Skip Starr and Andy
Vance stepped outside to thank
Frank Agostini, right, co owner of
E.G. Nick's, for his help with the
event. The show is based in the
Traverse City wine region of Old
Mission Peninsula and Leelanau
Peninsula.
Photo by Dave Willett
Mich-CAN Statewide
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