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Spring Valley EDA News

Ag Days 6k returns on Saturday, Aug. 16

07/13/2025 by Chris Hahn

Posted July 14, 2025. By David Phillips

Registration is now open for the annual Ag Days 6k run on the paved Spring Valley trail.

Runners start on County Road 8 near the camper parking area east of Spring Valley. They take a turn into the camping area after a short distance and then follow the trail all the way to Willow Park near the pavilion. The 6k race is about 3.72 miles long.

Runners will meet from 7 to 7:40 a.m. on Saturday, Aug. 16, at Willow Park, which is located just east of downtown, for the 8 a.m. race. Runners will board a bus at 7:45 a.m. for a shuttle to the camper parking area on County Road 8. The scenic trail has no intersections with public roads as it crosses over Spring Valley Creek several times and underneath Highway 16. There will be an aid station along the course plus refreshments at the end.

The first 50 people registering for the race will get a custom performance T-shirt.

Registration for the Ag Days 6k run is online with no added fees on the Spring Valley EDA website (springvalleyeda.org). Forms may also be picked up at City Hall. Race day registration begins at 7 a.m., but runners are encouraged to register in advance.

The price for the 6k race is $25 for runners signing up prior to Aug. 1. The price is $30 from Aug. 1 to the day of the race.

Trophies will be awarded to the overall male and female winners in the 6K race as well as for the top three males and females in age groups.

For more information on either event, contact Dave Phillips at 507-346-2368.

The annual 1k free kids run, called the Little Husker, will also take place on Saturday, Aug. 16, at 9:30 a.m. The race, sponsored by the Spring Valley Area Community Foundation, is free of charge. The routes for various ages are on the trail at Willow Park. For information, check the EDA website, springvalleyeda.org.

 

Click Here for Online Registration and Sign-up information

or 

Download the paper registration form here

 

Filed Under: Spring Valley EDA News

Top Hat Classics dealership now open at Matt’s Body Shop

06/21/2025 by Chris Hahn

Original article published in the Mower County Independent, Thursday, June,12 2025.   Reprinted with permission and gratitude.

By Gretchen Mensink Lovejoy

Greg Melartin’s taken a shine to chrome, and oh, the smiles it’s going to polish up.

“They’re for putting a smile on people’s faces. Some belong behind glass to preserve them for future generations, but the majority of them should be driven. The cars I’m buying and selling are nice, but they are drivers – something you can get in and enjoy the day driving them,” stated Melartin, proprietor of Matt’s Body Shop…and now of Top Hat Classics, a classic car dealership open at his collision and repair shop on the very north edge of Spring Valley, where he specializes in “classics, unique vehicles, motorcycles, cars, fun toys…I also buy and sell classic campers…anything cool and old, like the canned ham campers.”

There’s never been any doubt that Melartin would eventually trade in cars and vehicular curiosities he has effectually lost track of how many vehicles he’s personally bought and sold since he was old enough to steer and accelerate, estimating it at “about 50 now,” but his fascination with chrome, a near-heaven and holy whitewalls experience, began when he was a kid living in a trailer park. His mother’s friend Dave owned a vintage car, the fanciest thing he’d ever seen. It sparked in him a compulsion to tinker, to aspire toward repairing things – even taking his mom’s toaster and other appliances apart – to have the chance to put them back together, to overhaul and create. “It was like a 1932 or 1933 Plymouth my mom’s friend had, and he came to the trailer court we were living in, and from that moment, I was hooked.”

The shadetree dismantler went into the service, became a veteran who moved to New Jersey upon completing his commitment, then became a guy who needed to come home to Minnesota where his mother and grandparents were, and he worked in construction and other fields, but he was always a guy looking for a place to take apart a transmission or stick another magnetic parts tray. Matt’s Body Shop went on the market in late 2020, and Melartin bought it from Chris Czapiewski in March 2021, planning to make it efficient and self-sufficient enough that he could oversee operations and work on what he felt he ought to when necessary to sustain his tinkering habit or expand his business to include new endeavors. “The body shop was set up so that it could operate on its own, that all parts of it were occupied by mechanics, body people and customer service that could do what they need to do, and also, last winter, because it was so warm, there weren’t as many deer collisions to work on, so that meant that I needed to find something to do. This idea to have a dealership has always been in the back of my mind, but to actually get it off the ground…it’s been a year or two since.”

Melartin is always shopping for new wheels because that’s what he’s always done. He even once bought a car and traded it nearly the next day – and there was a cheeseburger and fries written into the deal. To spend an afternoon scrolling through car listings on Facebook Marketplace or Craigslist is to him like taking a day to go to a car show, minus the gas money. “I like to find cars on Facebook Marketplace, Craigslist, through word of mouth. If somebody’s looking for something specific, I can look for it for them. I try to find cars that are mechanically sound and have minimal rust. There are some special cars that I would get that are non-runners, but for the most part, I want running, driving vehicles. It’s easier to make more people smile with a running classic vehicle.”

He’d eventually like to add a pole barn as extra storage for the body shop and a place to stow a few classic cars, because the current arrangement finds his classics parked either next to the body shop or out on the yard. “I’d like to have maybe 15 cars. I’ve always wanted to put an additional pole barn here…I don’t want to have hundreds of cars. I’d like to keep it so that I can still manage the body shop, but this is something for me to do. My business is set up so that other people can handle it, but I like buying, selling, negotiating – that’s why I set up a dealership.” He quipped, “We are a one-stop, full mechanical and collision services shop. We also have full toy services.”

The adventure, for Melartin, lies in “meeting people and making deals.” “I like that people like talking about their cars, their dreams, their stories. A lot of people buy cars because they have memories tied to a vehicle that belonged to their grandparents, parents, aunts or uncles. I’ve sold a couple of bikes so far, and I sold a 1954 Ford F250 to a 20-year-old girl who was smiling from ear to ear.”

Top Hat Classics is located at Matt’s Body Shop on the north edge of Spring Valley. For more information, stop at the body shop, log onto the Matt’s Facebook page, or call 507-346-2161 and ask for Greg.

 

Courtesy of the Mower County Independent, 135 E Main St. LeRoy, MN 55951, (507)-324-5325

Filed Under: Spring Valley EDA News

Good Earth Village celebrates summer with June GoodStock

06/18/2025 by Chris Hahn

Original article published in the Mower County Independent, Thursday, June 12, 2025.   Reprinted with permission and gratitude.

By Gretchen Mensink Lovejoy

Tyler Anderson is proud to announce that his workplace has Thomas – and the shakes – along with a loud mouth and some vintage wings.

Better yet, there are the summer people.

“We’re pumped to have these three bands coming to Good Earth during Good Stock,” said Good Earth Village (GEV) hospitality and retreat director Anderson, listing that Thomas and the Shakes, Loud Mouth Brass, and Wings Over America: A Tribute to Paul McCartney & Wings will perform, adding, “The big thing this year is the decision to move the event up to mid-June and not have it at the end of summer.”

He highlighted that the 2025 GoodStock music festival, a family-friendly music party hosted by the Lutheran camp just northeast of Spring Valley, has been rescheduled from its August end-of-summer bash date to a summer kickoff party on June 21 and 22 that will feature almost all of the same activities as in previous years, such as the trail color run, family fun zone with games and wagon rides, a petting zoo and food trucks.

The trail color run has been a favorite for numerous GoodStock attendees, and Anderson stated that runners will again have the opportunity to trek uphill and down on GEV’s trails in the race. “On Saturday, June 21, we’ll have the color run. It starts up above on the hill and goes down through Old Town…it’s fun to do this run because it’s not in town and it’s not on flat ground. People have to run up and down the trails to participate.” The GEV website relayed that “the course will be on Good Earth Village trails – strollers are not recommended. There will be one short trail option, approximately one mile due to trail repairs. Cost is $15 per person before the event and $20 the day of the run.” Anderson commented that while the original registration guaran teed runners a race t-shirt, that deadline has passed, meaning that “people can still register for the race, and we will have t-shirts there the day of, but there’s no guarantee we’ll have your size.”

The camp staff has sparked a new element to the GoodStock celebration’s endeavors. “Obviously, people have chili cookoffs and meat cookoffs, but we are having a campfire cookoff – we’re hoping to have contestants who like to cook over the campfire – because cooking over the campfire is a whole different beast than grilling. Ody’s Country Meats is providing the protein, and we’ll have grill grates for the fire, but any other tools or sides that they need, they need to bring. There will be judging, and the color run participants get to sample. There will be a judges’ pick and fan favorites. We’ll try this out, and hopefully it will be a staple going forward once it catches some steam and popularity.”

The GEV website shared about each band coming to GoodStock, beginning with Thomas and the Shakes. “Thomas and the Shakes is a rock band from Elgin, Minn., formed in 2013 by Thomas Wescott (guitar/vocals) and Garrett Kolb (drums) with his unique ‘shaker’ kit – hence the name. In 2014, while at Mc Nally Smith College of Music, they released their debut EP ‘All My Favorite Things are Free,’ blending roots, reggae, folk, blues and rock. The band later expanded to include Mark Walsh (woodwinds), Logan Kolb (bass), and Tyler Kispert (guitar/vocals), bringing a fuller sound heard in their 2017 album ‘Mind Your Time’ and 2023’s ‘Carpet Booth Sessions.’ After nearly a decade, their friendship and shared musical vision continue to drive their evolving, original sound.”

Loud Mouth Brass is a col lection of brassy, forward adventures into music. “Your ears will smile and your toes will tap when you hear Loud Mouth Brass.” With a splash of New Or leans and a pinch of pop music, Loud Mouth Brass has a tasty musical recipe. While the band’s instrumental arrangements of music spanning the gamut from The Jackson Five to Fallout Boy will make your feet get the urge to dance, with several originals in the mix, this brassy band still makes sure to keep things fresh. From the top of its blue sousaphone to the bot tom of its thumping bass drum, this band exudes fun. The band’s lineup consists of Becca Combs-Cawley on sousaphone, Zach Sander on tenor sax, Erick Stascheck on bari sax, Jon Knutson on trumpet, Nick Novotny on drum set, and John Sievers on trombone. Don’t hesitate to get a little loud, because Loud Mouth Brass won’t mind.”

Wings Over America: A Tribute to Paul McCartney & Wings is an ensemble of the Collective Unconscious. “Band members of Collective Unconscious bring you a tribute show you won’t want to miss! Wings Over America: A Tribute to Paul Mc Cartney & Wings…based on the 1976 live album by Paul Mc Cartney and Wings, this show features some of the group’s greatest hits, along with songs by The Beatles, as well as other hits. This high-energy show will have you smiling, tapping your feet, and singing along. The hits include ‘Venus and Mars,’ ‘Rock Show,’ ‘Jet,’ ‘Medicine Jar,’ ‘Maybe I’m Amazed,’ ‘Lady Madonna,’ ‘Mull of Kintyre,’ ‘Picasso’s Last Words (Drink to Me),’ ‘Bluebird,’ ‘I’ve Just Seen a Face,’ ‘Yesterday,’ ‘Another Day,’ ‘Take It Away,’ ‘Live and Let Die,’, ‘Comin’ Up,’ ‘You Gave Me the Answer,’ ‘Listen to What the Man Said,’ ‘Go Now,’ ‘My Love, ‘Let ‘Em In,’ ‘Nine teen Hundred and Eighty-Five,’ ‘The Long and Winding Road,’ ‘Silly Love Songs,’ ‘Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey,’ ‘Band on the Run,” ‘C Moon,’ ‘Junior’s Farm,’ ‘Helen Wheels,’ ‘Hi Hi Hi,’ and ‘Hey Jude’.”

GoodStock officially begins at 11:00 a.m. with the campfire cookoff, followed by the color trail run check-in at 1:30 p.m. and the run leaving the starting line at 2:00 p.m. Food vendors will open their trucks at 2:00 p.m., and family fun zone gets the giggles going at 3:00 p.m. Thomas and the Shakes take the stage at 3:00 p.m., followed by Loud Mouth Brass at 4:30 p.m. and Wings Over America: A Tribute to Paul McCartney and the Wings will tune up at 5:30 p.m. The music event concludes at 7:00 p.m. or thereabouts to allow families to get their little ones home to bed on time. Rising to shine and give God the glory on Sunday morning at the outdoor amphitheater begins with coffee and refreshments in Log Lodge at 9:30 a.m. and proceeds outdoors to the Three Crosses at 10:00 a.m. Food trucks arriving at GEV include The Grove Eats – a smashburger and fries purveyor, El Sueno: Greek Edition, and Taco Lab to make dining out easy. Also, Anderson reminded attendees to bring lawn chairs and blankets for concert seating, but GEV asked that four-legged friends be left home.

He pointed out that the transition from end-of-summer to summer kickoff gives GEV summer camp staff the chance to be on hand to help with the family fun zone, the color run and other activities. “It will allow GoodStock visitors to meet GEV summer staff who usually are not able to attend due to their college classes beginning before an August GoodStock. “We’ll have all the summer staff here – they don’t get to be a part of the event because they’re going back to college. All the parents who bring their kids to camp see them here at check-in, but now, they actually get to meet them. And moving it lets people who want to go to town celebrations like Ag Days and other towns’ festivals do that in August.”

Anderson concluded, “We hope to keep this in June. With the change in dates, we’re really hoping to make this the biggest attendance ever this year. It’s free to attend, so come and have a great time.”

Good Earth Village is located at 25303 Old Town Dr., Spring Valley. For more information on the camp and its programming, log onto its website at www.goodearthvillage.org, or email  info@goodearthvillage.org, find details on the GEV Facebook page, or call 507-346-2494 during office hours, Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

 

Courtesy of the Mower County Independent, 135 E Main St. LeRoy, MN 55951, (507)-324-5325

 

 

Filed Under: Spring Valley EDA News, Uncategorized

Spring Valley Public Library prepares for summer reading program

06/01/2025 by Chris Hahn

Original article published in the Mower County Independent, Thursday, May 22, 2025.   Reprinted with permission and gratitude.

By Gretchen Mensink Lovejoy

Spring Valley’s library board of trustees met last Thursday, May 15 to manage business before the busyness of summer.

Spring Valley Public Library (SVPL) Director Melissa Vander Plas requested that the board consider allotting paid work hours for summer help to offset employee vacations, noting that a volunteer has already committed to being on hand for part of the season, and she would like to retain and pay that volunteer for additional hours as the children’s summer reading program progresses. The board passed a unanimous vote in favor of setting aside money for that purpose.

The director related that library assistant Jeanette Ramaker is “leading the organization of the summer reading program,” this year themed “Ignite Your Imagination at the Library.” Special presentations are slated for Wednesday afternoons at the library in June and July at 1:30 p.m. More information will be available on the library’s Facebook page and throughout the library, as well as in the Mower County Independent.

Vander Plas shared in her director’s report that the new Evergreen library operating system has been put into service. “The transition went pretty well – not without its glitches, but much better than it could have been. We are able to perform most of our day-to-day operations with a few patron records and item records needing to be updated when some of the data didn’t transfer over correctly.” She cited that during the days that the library was still open but not functioning using the new system, library staff spent time cleaning and rearranging SVPL’s collections – “moving the children’s DVDs into their own section for easier and safer browsing for kid-friendly selections.” “Also, we have a Father’s Day card-making workshop for kids on June 7.”

The Friends of the Spring Valley Public Library held a book sale on April 26, garnering $900 for SVPL’s benefit, and members followed up with a garage sale to bring in more money to assist the library’s mission. Vander Plas stated that the Friends “will be helping us with summer reading programs as support, and they’ll be collecting prizes for our drawings…they’re just a valuable resource.”

Donations and memorials for which the board expressed its gratitude included gifts to the SELCO Foundation from Harlan and Pat Bucknell, Stuart and Carol Gross in memory of Dorothy Simpson, Deanna Capelle in memory of Wayn Dreyer, from Ethel Marchant, Carol Himle, and Laura Mangan, Adopt-A-Book donations from Char O’Connor, Friends of the Spring Valley Public Library, Deb Hagen-Moe, Stephanie Vreeman, Jennifer Terbeest and Nicole Pokorney, an anonymous donor giving to the city’s library fund in memory of Roberta Flaherty, the Osterud-Winter Trust Fund’s biannual gift to the library fund, Char O’Connor’s memorial honoring Russ Betsinger, and gifts to the library’s contingency fund from Rita Hartert and from Narcotics Anonymous participants who hold meetings at the library. Vander Plas remarked that “we’ve had donations totaling a little over $2,500 since the beginning of the year,” and she wanted to thank everyone who has contributed to the library’s wellbeing as a community resource.

The library will be closed Monday, May 26 in observance of Memorial Day, and its June board meeting will be held on Tuesday, June 17 at 6:00 p.m. instead of the usual third Thursday due to that being Juneteenth, a national holiday. The meeting schedule will resume in July, and the board will not meet again until September because it takes a break in August for Ag Days.

The Spring Valley Public Library is open Monday from 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., Tuesday through Thursday from noon to 7:00 p.m., Friday from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., and the first and third Saturdays of each month from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. The library staff is available to assist with media inquiries and library questions. For more information, stop in at the library on Jefferson Street, just behind First National Bank, or call 507-346-2100.

Courtesy of the Mower County Independent, 135 E Main St. LeRoy, MN 55951, (507)-324-5325

Filed Under: Spring Valley EDA News

Osterud Winter Trust marks anniversary, takes grant requests

05/28/2025 by Chris Hahn

Original article published in the Mower County Independent, Thursday, May 22, 2025.   Reprinted with permission and gratitude.

By Gretchen Mensink Lovejoy

 

John Osterud had a gift.

Now it’s his legacy.

“He died December 31. That’s so like John Osterud. If he had died January 1, he would have had a whole other year left that he needed to live,” recalled Spring Valley resident Sue Kolling, who was fortunate to be one of the people who knew Spring Valley Home Federal Savings Bank founder Osterud, a man whose vast curiosity and entrepreneur’s spirit left a ledger of his indelible philanthropic enthusiasm for the people who surrounded him and the people who today inhabit his chosen hometown.

Kolling, a board member of the Osterud-Winter Trust, explained how Osterud lived and lasted beyond his years as a bene factor to the people of the Spring Valley, Wykoff and Ostrander area. “John Osterud founded Home Federal, and his daughter was Karen Winter. When John died, he left a legacy to Spring Valley in a $1 million trust fund. The fund was established in 1994, and since then, it has distributed over $1.9 million back into the community, while the $1 million remains intact – twice a year, money is distributed based on the earnings and allocations. Seventy-five percent of the earnings are to be used for Kingsland School District scholarships (currently totaling $925,000), Spring Valley’s historical society, Spring Valley Living, Spring Valley Cemetery, and the remaining 25 percent is allocated as discretionary funds. Primary consideration is given to organizations that provide emergency and dis aster relief in or within a 15-mile radius of Spring Valley and meet the federal tax exemption requirements of a 501(c)(3).”

Osterud’s biography was included in full in his obituary, reading that he left this plane on Dec. 31, 1993. “John Nicholas Osterud was born in Hurdal (near Oslo), Norway. His parents, John O. and Ingeborg Mitsund Osterud, came to America in 1901, bringing four children: Harold, 14; Agnethe, 12; Josephine, 10, and John, 2. They first lived in St. Paul, then moved to Barnum and settled on a small farm. After his father’s death in 1903, his mother moved her family to North Dakota to homestead a quarter section of land. They constructed a sod house, raised cattle, pigs and chickens, and planted 100 acres of wheat and flax and a large garden. With the nearest school 60 miles away, his mother employed a tutor for John. His first formal education began at age 11 when a school district was organized nearby. After five years of hard times, Mrs. Osterud decided to go back to her husband’s area where the Osterud family had first settled in 1861. She bought a tiny house in Spring Valley and worked for 10 cents an hour as a cleaning lady. John found work splitting wood, working gardens and milking cows. During his high school years, he found a job in Rochester as a dishwasher at the Miller Café, working 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. for $7 per week. A cousin helped him find work in the dining room of the Colonial Hotel-Hospital where he doubled his $35 a month salary by being adept at earning good tips. His job paid so well and he was so comfortable, he ignored his mother’s pleas to return home to attend school. Finally, she boarded the CGW train and came to angrily demand he return with her. He found the task of making up his school work a memorable ordeal, but also played on the basketball team and graduated in 1919. Other work included clerking at the Farmers Store and as mail clerk at the post office.”

His biography continued, “In 1920, John decided the banking business ‘appealed to me,’ and he began working as bookkeeper at First State Bank in Spring Valley. The job included mopping floors, dusting, shoveling coal, stoking the furnace, and clearing sidewalks. After nine years, he was assistant cashier. When the bank closed in 1929, he worked with his brother, Harold — who was a new auto distributor for Star & Durant – financing cars. He and good friend, Harry Washburn, formed W & O Finance Company. This led to the formation of Security Finance Corp., capitalized with $50,000 which he said brought them good ‘public notice.’ John then devoted all time to financing and insurance business. SFC owned and operated small loan companies in six area towns. In 1931, Osterud Agency, Inc., was formed to handle the insurance business. He then organized Minnesota Credit Company to make agricultural loans to farmers and dairymen. John was also general agent for the Guaran tee Mutual Life Co. of Omaha.”

His family life changed as he grew older. “John married Helen Howe, a pretty and talented woman also working in the field of banking. She shared full partnership with him in the business as well as their busy home and social life. Helen died in 1961 at their winter home in Florida. Daughter Karen was born in 1939, and died in March of this year (1993), a severe blow from which John never recovered.”

Business evolved prior to his marriage and becoming a parent, as the biography related, “In 1933, John contacted business as sociates and formed Home Federal Savings & Loan Assoc., later to become Home Federal Savings Bank. He described his 43 years as a director and controlling officer as ‘a labor of love.’ Home Federal opened with capital of $2,620 and today lists assets of over $400 million, with offices in six cities.”

John’s education is a remark able story in itself. “From modest childhood beginnings, he continued as an adult with many correspondence and home study courses in administration and insurance; completed the 5-year Chartered Life Underwriters course; was a graduate student for his Master of Science degree at Wharton College, U of PA.; studied at various colleges to earn his Bachelor’s of Law degree, and in 1940 was admitted to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court.”

It went on to note, “John, Helen and Karen traveled extensively around the world. They maintained a winter home in Florida and the cottage in Barnum where they entertained family and friends for many fruitful and fun fishing experiences. Although John ‘retired’ in 1977, he continued life apace – serving on Home Federal board, enjoying winters at his Florida condo, summer fishing with grandsons Mike and Scott at Barnum, and his office apartment in Spring Valley. A few years ago, John moved to Madonna Towers, where he cultivated a wide friendship with all the residents and staff. He maintained a voluminous correspondence, and kept in touch by phone with numerous friends…his boundless interests, gracious hospitality, and generosity in sharing his blessings will forever be re membered by family and friends.”

Osterud’s funeral at Our Savior’s Lutheran Church in Spring Valley was held with casketbearers whom he likely knew in business and friendship, including Roger Weise, Keith Hagen, Gor don Dathe, James Gardner, Darrell Freeman and Lee Himle. He now rests in the Spring Valley Cemetery on the southeast side of Spring Valley.

Home Federal officially became an acquisition of Alerus Financial in December 2024, rounding out 90 years of home town banking service to the Spring Valley community. The Osterud-Winter Trust carries forward his name and his dedication to his neighbors through the initial $1 million investment tucked away in 1994. Kolling outlined that “there are three trustees…one representing the city, one the school, and another, the ministerial” and that a total of 23 trustees had served over the past 30 years, overseeing the portfolio managed by U.S. Bank Private Wealth Management. “We give grants two times a year…funds are disbursed twice a year, in June and December.

The foundation distributed $14,000 to the Kingsland School District for scholarships in the second half of 2024, as well as $1,750 each to the Spring Valley Cemetery Association, Spring Valley Living, Spring Valley Public Library, and the Spring Valley Historical Society. Discretionary grant awards were given to the Spring Valley Ministerial Association — $1,100 for Senior Dining, $500 for the backpack food program for children, $1,000 to the Spring Valley food shelf, $300 to the Spring Valley Historical Society for new brochures, to the Spring Valley Fire Department for one set of turnout gear at a cost of $3,800, and $300 to the Spring Valley library for musical instruments.

Kolling observed that the trust’s mission is not to interfere with the organizations’ intended projects, but instead, to under write them. “The reward is to see things happen that might not otherwise be possible. We don’t want to be a part of it – we want to be only the source. It’s wonderful to see the fire department have equipment, the library to have what it needs. The library and historical society and cemetery have all been struggling over the past years, but they know that they have a check coming in twice a year. The grant process is not a complicated process…it has to be a non-profit organization. This is probably the best committee I have ever been on because we give out money to people that need it, to help people launch projects. The Spring Valley Area Community Foundation (SVACF) is the people’s foundation, but this is a specific person’s foundation.”

She went on to state that being a trustee of Osterud’s investments has returned dividends unforetold. “It’s a very rewarding role to fill because I worked with John Osterud…I knew John Osterud. Not everybody did. A number of us had the privilege of working for him. In fact, he’s the first honoree on the Kingsland Wall of Fame. John was an amazing per son. This is a wonderful gift that keeps on giving. What a wonderful legacy.”

The 2025 midyear grant application deadline is May 28, and because Kolling’s term as a trustee has recently expired, re quests for grant applications and information may be directed to Steve Himle at shimle@mchsi.com, Scott Mul holland at smulholland78@hot mail.com, or Steve Heusinkveld at cows@cheerful.com.

 

Courtesy of the Mower County Independent, 135 E Main St. LeRoy, MN 55951, (507)-324-5325

Filed Under: Spring Valley EDA News

Highways 63 detours begin June 2 for road improvements south of Spring Valley

05/21/2025 by Chris Hahn

Highways 63 detours begin June 2 for road improvements south of Spring Valley

SPRING VALLEY, Minn. – Motorists on Highway 63 will encounter detours beginning June 2 as crews make road improvements south of Spring Valley, according to the Minnesota Department of Transportation.

Construction crews will be making concrete pavement repairs on Highway 63 from Highway 16 in Spring Valley to the Iowa state line. They will patch, replace damaged concrete panels or repair or seal joints. The work takes time to remove, repair and then wait for the concrete to cure or gain sufficient strength to hold vehicle traffic.

Traffic impacts

Work on Highway 63 will begin from Spring Valley (Highway 16) to north of Highway 56. Highway 63 will be closed to thru traffic and detoured. Residents will be able to reach their homes and businesses but may have to use alternate routes at times. Work is scheduled to occur June 2 to early July.

  • Detour route: Highway 16, Mower County Road 14 and Highway 56

Once the work is completed north of the Highway 56 intersection, the final 0.5-mile stretch of Highway 63 will be worked on. The section is located from the Highway 56 intersection to the Iowa state line. It is anticipated that work will begin early July and be completed late-July.

Half of that work zone will be worked on at a time with Highway 63 having a lane closure with signals directing traffic.

  • When work occurs on the Highway 63 and Highway 56 intersection, Highway 56 motorists will be detoured.
    • Detour route: Highway 63 north, west on Fillmore County Road 14, south on Fillmore County Road 1, west on Mower County Road 11, south on Mower County Road 53 and south on Mower County Road 12 to reach Highway 56

Scheduled dates are approximate and subject to change.

Additional project work

Concrete pavement repairs are scheduled to occur on multiple highways from 2025 to 2026. The following are the roads that will also be worked on during 2025.

  • Highway 56 from Dodge County Road 34 to West Concord (Dodge County Road 24), late summer
  • Hwy 14 westbound near Dodge Center, late summer

To learn more about this project, go to MnDOT’s website where you can also sign up for email and text message updates.

Stay connected, informed

  • Check out upcoming MnDOT southeast Minnesota construction projects.
  • Want to stay updated on winter driving events and emergency closures road? Sign up for our text message and email updates.
  • Join the MnDOT Southeast Minnesota Facebook group and follow us on MnDOT Southeast on X.
  • Find road updates in Minnesota on 511mn.org or get a free smartphone app at Google Play or the App Store.
  • Search job openings and sign up to receive southeast Minnesota job alerts.

Filed Under: Spring Valley EDA News

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