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Spring Valley EDA News

Key to Giving 5K race set for April 27th

04/02/2025 by Chris Hahn

Key to Giving race set for April 27

The Kingsland Key Club is holding a new race this year called Key to Giving 5k on Sunday, April 27.   The race will start at 1 p.m. at Kingsland High School located at 705 N. Section Ave. in Spring valley, MN. Runners and walkers are encouraged to take part in the event, which will raise funds for Doctors Without Borders. People may also donate to the cause without taking part.

Registration is available online at  https://runsignup.com/Race/MN/SpringValley/KeyToGiving5k

The registration page also has choices at the top to sign up for the race or donate to the race. People registering by April 18 will receive a T-shirt.

The Key Club is a service organization sponsored by the Spring Valley Kiwanis Club. Students in the club set up charitable projects each year. This is the first time they have organized a running event.

REGISTER HERE 

Filed Under: Spring Valley EDA News

Bluff Brothers Brewery pours out first year of business

03/03/2025 by Chris Hahn

 

Original article published in the Mower County Independent, Thursday, November 20, 2025.   Reprinted with permission and gratitude.

By Gretchen Mensink Lovejoy

 

While his brother, Mitchell, wanted to game, Marcus Plaehn always wanted to be a cruncher.

This approachable beer’s calling Marcus’s workweek bluff.

“Our goal has been to make approachable beers that people can come in and try. Don’t be scared to come in and try our beers – the theory people might have is that they have to drink heavy beers, but we want our beer to be approachable,” said Bluff Brothers Brewery co-proprietor Mitchell Plaehn, as his brother Marcus concurred, “We wanted to create a nice, warm environment with good vibes so that people can enjoy that beer.”

This plan’s quite the shift from what Marcus, who graduated from Kingsland in 2015, wanted to do post-education. In fact, he was determined to be a cruncher, just like their father, Doug. “My plan was pretty much always to go into school for accounting and follow my dad’s footsteps,” he admitted, while 2010 graduate Mitchell cited that he had experienced his own shifts in addition to the newer dream of becoming a brewer and owner of a taproom. “In high school, I wanted to be a game warden, then I changed my mind in college and ended up in finance.”

Mitchell outlined how the introduction to beer-craft happened as just a simple flirtation with kitchen distilling. “We started at the end of 2019…our homebrewing started in my kitchen with a typical kitchen distiller, and I moved it to the garage… made a couple of beers for my wedding, and it was sort of marketing for us…to see what everybody thought, and everybody liked our beer.”

Having established that their suds were as friendly as a handshake, the pair began searching for a building to open their brewery in September 2021, and with the relocation of the Spring Valley Veterinary Clinic to a new building in the industrial park to the northwest, they began overhauling the rooms where puppies and kittens were introduced to the veterinarian for the first time. They had considered a building downtown but determined that it didn’t have as much exposure or potential for amenities as they’d have liked, but the clinic’s square footage won them over. From November 2022 to October 2023, they tore out walls and renovated, brewed some good beers and tasted them, tasted other beers and compared them, and applied for their brewery license so that they could officially open in October 2023. Marcus recounted, “We did a full renovation.” Mitchell added, “We put in all new wiring, new plumbing…took a lot of trips to Stewartville with the demoed materials. We accomplished it, and it was rewarding.” Marcus concurred, “Our hard work paid off. It’s exciting…and we are now finally able to share our beers. We’ve gotten advice from others who said that ‘if you like your beer, (others will, too)’.”

New beers have bubbled up in addition to the original list of favorites, and they determined at the outset of brewery ownership that they would maintain certain beers and leave room for new pints to populate the rotation. Mitchell pointed out that their own favorites and those of their customers are “consistently” available until sold out, but experimentation’s always underway behind the brewery’s back wall and in conversation between people holding the glasses. Mitchell stated, “It’s like baking a new batch of cookies…it takes a few weeks to try it.” Marcus agreed that beer-craft adventures often begin much like neighborly recipe exchanges. “A lot of times, we’ve either had a beer at another place that we like or we’re looking into something that people like.”

The brothers, who have maintained day jobs in finance alongside brewing for the weekends, acknowledged at their brewery’s outset that things – like enjoying a lager or ale and a good chat – are much friendlier with room for children and for good eats, and that meant that they welcome families to bring their half-pints and order pizza to feed them if they’d like to do so. “We want to create a nice, warm environment with good vibes,” Marcus reiterated, while Mitchell observed, “We want this to be a place for people to hang out. We have big TVs for people to watch football. And it’s a good problem when we’re running out of beer.”

The Plaehns marked the one-year anniversary of their sociable hops house on Oct. 5, 2024 with an Oktoberfest at their establishment, and expansion is on their horizon in 2025 as they aspire to purchase and install a new brew system and fermenter and buy kegs. Meanwhile, they’ve added canned beers to their menu, they’ve kept a steady lineup of food trucks stopped outside their front door to make the choice of what to eat with a cold one easier, and they’ve taken their suds to the streets during Spring Valley community events such as Wednesdays on Broadway and Ag Days – they don’t always stay home to help people celebrate what’s satisfying in this life.

Finally, the brothers themselves have been as approachable as their beers, as highlighted by an article on the Spring Valley Economic Development Authority (EDA) website written by former Bluff Country News Group (BCNG) owner David Phillips, who relayed, “Bluff Brothers Brewing received the first-ever Community Spirit Award during the annual meeting and banquet of the Spring Valley Area Chamber of Commerce Jan. 15 at the Spring Valley VFW Hall. The award is the successor to the previous Volunteer of the Year Award, which the Chamber has awarded to individuals the past several years.”

The article went on, “Chamber President Angie Gensmer said that there are many deserving people, but often it is the same people getting recognized by various organizations. ‘Since we are a chamber that represents businesses, we should try to give an award to a business instead of an individual,’ she said. Bluff Brothers Brewery is always trying to help out in the community, which is why it is deserving of this first-ever award, noted Gensmer. ‘I think the Bluff Brothers are a very great new business in the community,’ she said. ‘They bring a lot of people with a lot of their activities, and they are constantly evolving with their different events.’ She explained that the business gets a lot of attention, not just from the local community, but also by others from outside the area. The owners are ‘out-of-the-box’ thinkers’ who work with multiple local nonprofit organizations, even opening their business after hours for events, she added.”

The Plaehns’ beers are ever-changing, of course, because that’s part of the fermented fun – raising a glass to introduce tastebuds to different delights — but what remains the same is that they’re two guys who know just how to bubble up the best brews in town.

Bluff Brothers Brewery, at 817 N. Broadway Ave., Spring Valley, is open Thursday from 3:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m., Friday from 3:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m., Saturday from 11:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m., and Sunday from 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. For more information, call 507-218-0548, email bluffbrothersbrewingllc@gmail.com, or log onto the Bluff Brothers Brewing Facebook page.

 

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

Filed Under: Spring Valley EDA News

Kingsland school board handles roofing project bids

02/24/2025 by Chris Hahn

Original article published in the Mower County Independent, Thursday, November 20, 2025.   Reprinted with permission and gratitude.

By Gretchen Mensink Lovejoy

 

Roofing company representatives attended the Feb. 6 Kingsland school board workshop to outline for the board the details of the condition of the school building’s existing roof and elaborate on the work that will be done this summer to reroof the main school structure. The voters of the Kingsland district authorized the roofing project through a referendum held during the Nov. 5 general election. The ballot included two questions – one for re-roofing the school and making various repairs to it and auxiliary structures on the grounds, and a second for the construction of a new gymnasium to ease the district’s physical education classes’ schedules as they attempt to use the district’s only gymnasium each school day. Voters approved the first question but not the second.

Kingsland used Garland Company, a roofing materials manufacturer, to install a new roof over the gymnasium two years ago after severe weather caused damage, and the administration chose to seek the company’s service as a contractor for the rest of the building for consistency and assurance of continuity in project oversight. The representative brought with him a sample of the roofing materials’ layers to allow board members to see how the materials would be laid down and mitigate water entering the building. Kingsland Superintendent Scott Klavetter informed the board that Garland brings with its work a 30-year warranty that will cover the district’s literal overhead liability if any need arises – 2053 is the next time a school board should have to consider re-roofing the school if it’s still in place. Facilities business listed later on the agenda involved the roofing and maintenance projects, and it was then that he spoke of how re-roofing is set for this summer and any further work will be done next summer. The board voted to approve low bidder Jackson & Associates as the subcontractor that Garland will use to carry out the roofing work.

A resident of the district raised concerns during the district public comments, expressing frustration that the board had decided to pursue a May facilities referendum to poll voters for a new gymnasium shortly after the general election vote showed that taxpayers were not willing to support such an expenditure as part of the initial referendum. He stated that he felt that the board is “sneaking this in under the radar” because he and others with whom he had conversed did not feel that they had been offered a community outreach opportunity. “It’s just three months ago that we voted this down by two-thirds. It wasn’t even close…the TV station was in the locker rooms the other night, and they showed pictures of the rusty registers over the showers at least three times. That tells me that you can’t take care of what you’ve got, so why should you build new?” He went on to suggest that the district focus on academics, on hiring or further educating teachers. “I think we’re looking at the wrong thing – none of this is because of the gymnasium space. And if you’re going to hold a vote, why not have a polling place in Wykoff? The thing that makes this look suspicious is that it was (begun) before the new board members we voted on were in place.”

Kingsland’s school board did return to posing a referendum to build a new gymnasium within months of the first proposal’s failure, but the consensus that led to the decision was that if the community were to be willing to reconsider, it would be best to bring the matter back to them before the costs of materials and labor rose significantly. New board member Ann Oeltjen acknowledged that the timing might appear suspicious, but she countered that she is in favor of the action. “Just so you know, I am okay with it.” Board member Brady Wolfgram said, “There’s nothing underhanded. It was the timeline. We had to come back with it so that the cost is the same amount.” The visitor commented, “Maybe you can use the money to pay teachers a little better.” Klavetter stated that the Minnesota Department of Education (MDE) sets guidelines for teacher pay, meaning that Kingsland has no large authority to raise teacher pay even if the board were to wish to do so. Wolfgram cited, “On Facebook…everybody thinks we’re trying to sneak this through, but it’s not the intent. We’re trying to get this out to people. My daughter comes home and says that the high school students have to stand around for 10 minutes to wait for half of the gym.” Klavetter contributed, “We have had two different high school and elementary physical education teachers use the gym with the curtain down the middle, but they all said that it’s not rigid enough to stop balls going through the curtain into the other side, and if a middle school teacher is trying to teach a lesson, the kids can’t hear.” And Wolfgram relayed his opinion on the gymnasium and replacing the circa-1950s locker rooms. “For me, I don’t feel that we’re asking for what we don’t need. At what point are we not going to be able to use the locker rooms? When they talked to us about it, they said that the cost would be the same to build new as it is to repair them, and if we had (new locker rooms), we could park all of the buses in the bus shed instead of storing things in the bus shed.”

Board chairman Kyle Rader rounded out the exchange between the board and the visitor, thanking him for his time and input while Rader and Klavetter recounted that the board has delegated its membership to attend township and local government meetings to provide information and hosted numerous open house events before each facilities referendum proposal is forwarded to a vote, and typically, only one – or no one – attends. Rader advised, “It’s frustrating trying to reach people these days. We went to all the town hall meetings, held open houses. Sometimes you have to engage with your community to know what’s going on the community, because I can’t do all of that (for everyone).”

Klavetter’s superintendent’s report involved a preview of planning the 2025-2026 aca[1]demic calendar. He wrote, “We developed a draft calendar for next school year. I will be meeting with administrators from the other SMEC schools in February to compare draft calendars and create as much consistency as possible for our shared programs. The goal will be to have a final draft ready for school board approval in March.”

He then outlined, “Governor Walz recently released the first version of his proposed state budget for 2025-2027. The governor’s proposed budget includes minimal funding increases in a few specific areas and some funding reductions in other areas…the December minimal budget surplus for the current legislative cycle (fiscal year 2026-2027) and a $3.5 billion deficit for the next (fiscal year 2028-2029). It is, however, a development that we will need to monitor and plan for accordingly. One upside is that inflationary increases for education were written into statute during the last legislative session, meaning school districts will see a 2 percent increase in the per pupil funding formula each year.”

He continued, “Among the governor’s proposed spending reductions, special education funding is particularly concerning locally. Special education transportation is currently fully funded by the state. The governor’s proposed budget would re[1]duce this to 95 percent for school year 2025-2026 and 90 percent for school year 2026-2027, meaning local districts would need to begin funding a portion of this expense out of the local general fund. This relatively small percentage would add up quickly for rural school districts like Kingsland that transport students across multiple school districts to attend shared special education programs.”

Klavetter included that “the Spring Valley-Wykoff FFA will be hosting its annual pancake breakfast Tuesday, February 18 from 7:00 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. in the ag shop…community members are welcome to attend,” as “this is one of many activities that will be held throughout the week of February 18-21 to celebrate National FFA Week.”

High school principal Dana Simmons relayed in her written report that the Kingsland One Act Play team placed second at the sub-section competition and is advancing to sections at Kasson; that the seventh grade ag class is meeting with kindergarten monthly to cooperate on an art project; “the FFA wildlife team placed sixth in their most recent competition and will advance to state…Carson Wolfgram came in first place overall,” and in spelling bee news, “Emmalyn Rader won first place, and Blaze Haddad came in second…these students will advance to the regional spelling bee on February 4.”

Important dates for students and parents to note include that there is no school this Friday, Feb. 14 due to teacher in-service and professional development, but Snow Week coronation is slated for that evening following the 6:00 girls’ basketball game. There is also no school on Feb. 17, in observance of Presidents’ Day. Snow Week is Feb. 18 to Feb. 21 – the FFA pancake breakfast is included.

The consent agenda included reviewing the minutes of the Jan. 22 meeting and February bills.

Kingsland’s school board holds two meetings each month. The first is a workshop held on the first Monday at 6:00 p.m., and the second is the regular meeting on the third Monday at 6:00 p.m., each in the Kingsland elementary conference room.

The public is welcome to attend.

For more information, log onto the Kingsland website at www.kingsland.k12.mn.us, call the district office at 507-346- 7276, or join the gallery at the next meeting. The February board meeting is set for Wednesday, Feb. 19 in observance of the Monday, Feb. 17 Presidents’ Day holiday.

 

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

Filed Under: Spring Valley EDA News

Spring Valley Completes 2025 Comprehensive Housing Study

02/20/2025 by Chris Hahn

Published February 20, 2025 

Chris Hahn – EDA Director 

 

The Spring Valley Economic Development Authority (EDA) recently completed a comprehensive housing study of the Spring Valley community.   A housing study assesses the housing needs of a community and is important initial step in the planning process for future development.

This study was paid for through grant funding from Compeer Financial, and the National Association of Realtors, and was conducted by Community and Economic Development Associates (CEDA)

The EDA would like to thank the residents of Spring Valley who participated in the Public Utilities survey at the end of last year.  The input from Spring Valley residents was a valuable part of completing this study.

Additional thanks to the project steering committee, the Spring Valley EDA, City Council, and Public Utilities.

View the completed 2025 Spring Valley Housing Study here.

 

Filed Under: Spring Valley EDA News

Fillmore County board debates Spring Valley Street widths

02/11/2025 by Chris Hahn

Original article published in the Mower County Independent, Thursday, February 6, 2025.  Reprinted with permission and gratitude.

Gretchen Mensik Lovejoy

Fillmore County Highway Engineer Ron Gregg sat before the Fillmore County commissioners last Tuesday, Jan. 28 with a cooperative agreement with the city of Spring Valley for the construction of County State Aid Highway (CSAH) 8 – Tracy Road – from Highway 16 and 63 to Section Avenue, or CSAH 1.  

The construction agreement will outline “how it will happen and how the county will participate in the cost of the project.” Commissioner Mitch Lentz, who represents the district that includes the Wykoff area, asked Gregg, “Have you worked out the Safe Routes to School…if there’s funding?” Gregg replied that that effort would have had to begin as a collaboration with the school district prior to the CSAH project being planned by the city and county. However, he assured Lentz that sidewalks are included in the project’s design. Lentz, who is a farmer who often travels the portion of CSAH 8, Farmer Street, that the county and city repaired and upgraded just over a year ago, registered his mild frustration that Farmer Street was narrowed when it was reengineered and now does not have enough space to accommodate in one lane tractors with dual rear wheels when there are cars parked on both sides of the street. “Shouldn’t there be no parking the whole way? It was narrowed the whole way. When residents park on both sides, I, with my little tractor, have to drive in the center.”  

Gregg spoke again of the proposed Tracy Road/CSAH 8 project, relating that existing parking allows adequate space for cars and that that space will be narrowed by one foot as Tracy Road is narrowed. Lentz pointed out, “Tracy Road is extremely busy with buses. With all that traffic parked on the sides of the road, if the residents park on the sides of the road, it will be a lot narrower.” Commissioner Duane Bakke, who represents constituents in the Lanesboro area, asked, “Can you change parking to one side?” Lentz added, “I would like to see, when you narrow roads like that, no parking on both sides.” Gregg countered, “In order to accommodate tractors in town, the city (sets parking ordinances). The city is responsible for half the cost of sidewalks.” Commissioner Larry Hindt, who represents the district that includes the city of Spring Valley and who resides close to Tracy Road/CSAH 8, remarked, “On Tracy Road, when there are school activities, people park on both sides of the street. It really narrows the street.” Bakke commented that motorists – including farmers and truck drivers – should be able to drive in their own lanes, according to the designs being considered. Lentz stated, “It would be best if there was no parking when the road narrow.” Bakke persisted in his opinion that parking ought to be limited to one side of the street, and Hindt said, “The school should be aware that there would be parking on one side for events…they need to be aware of that.”  

Commissioner Marc Prestby, chairing the panel, asked Gregg what he thought the commissioners should do, given the new discussion about parking. Gregg answered that the construction agreement is “ready to go,” and Prestby pressed, “This agreement is set to go, but….” Lentz suggested that the commissioners should recommend the parking issue to the city of Spring Valley before determining what to do. Hindt made a motion to approve the agreement, and Lentz seconded, saying, “I second it, but I will vote against it because I don’t believe that narrowing roads (is beneficial in this instance).” Bakke said, “This agreement is for the cost, not the actual construction.” The motion passed, and Gregg called for the board to clarify what it had just accepted. County administrator Bobbie Hillery responded, “This is for the agreement, but we will bring it back (for parking discussions).”  

Fillmore County Sheriff John DeGeorge arrived to finalize details for the purchase of body cameras. The commissioners and the sheriff’s office have been communicating about the purchase and implementation of the cameras and a camera policy for at least the past several weeks. The total cost will be $95,500, and the county is required to pay $24,501.10 upfront and $17,749.72 a year for operation and support. Commissioner Randy Dahl made the first motion to approve the camera purchase. Lentz seconded, after which the board voted to approve the cameras, then the policy governing their use.  

Minnesota Driftless Hiking Trail representative Alex Shapiro updated the board on the long-distance hiking trail project’s progress, explaining that work to plot the trail was begun approximately six years ago and that it will be the first of its kind in southern Minnesota as a pedestrian route longer than 25 miles. The trail’s construction will require “substantial funding and support” from landowners, county officials, the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, and from the state legislature. The trail will likely bring foot traffic to towns for “safety and economic development,” and the proponents assured the board that the trail will be accessible to emergency utility vehicles for medical purposes. Construction is expected to be completed within the next decade.  

Director of nursing Jessica Erickson brought forward a request to purchase 21 first aid kits for the sheriff’s department and local police departments and pull-up seals for the kits. She related how the kits would be distributed – 15 would be placed in deputies’ squad vehicles, and three each would be given to the Rushford, Preston and Lanesboro departments. Erickson shared that the Chatfield Police Department declined the kits because it had already purchased them. She went on to state that the seals she requested are meant to “help keep track of whether a kit has been used…if you don’t have the seals, then you have to inventory the kits, and this helps to see if a kit has been used.” The commissioners obliged both requests.  

Human resources officer Lindsi Engle asked the board to consider the resignation of social worker Kourtney Olson – effective Jan. 10, and to promote eligibility worker Christina Gilder to social worker as of Jan. 31. The county is advertising internally and externally for a replacement eligibility worker. The board agreed to promote part-time deputy Drew Copley to full-time deputy – effective Feb. 28 – and then passed a memorandum of understanding with the Local $49 union. Lastly, Hillery brought forward discussion regarding the commissioners’ respective committee assignments and potential changes to the list, as Prestby agreed to assume corrections committee duties in place of Bakke.  

The consent agenda included approving the minutes of the Jan. 14 meeting.  

Fillmore County’s commissioners convene on the first, second and fourth Tuesday mornings of each month at 9:00 a.m. in the lower-level boardroom at the Fillmore County courthouse in Preston. The public is welcome to attend. For more information, log onto the county website at www.co.fillmore.mn.us, or have a seat in the gallery at the next meeting. 

 

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

Filed Under: Spring Valley EDA News

Bluff Brothers Brewing wins first Community Spirit Award at Chamber annual meeting

01/20/2025 by Chris Hahn

 Published Thursday January 19, 2025 

By David Phillips

 

Marcus Plaehn of Bluff Brothers Brewing receives the Community Spirit Award from Spring Valley Area Chamber of Commerce President Angie Gensmer.

Bluff Brothers Brewing received the first ever Community Spirit Award during the annual meeting and banquet of the Spring Valley Area Chamber of Commerce Jan. 15 at the Spring Valley VFW Hall.

The award is the successor to the previous Volunteer of the Year award, which the Chamber has awarded to individuals the past several years. Chamber President Angie Gensmer said that there are many deserving people, but often it is the same people getting recognized by various organizations in different ways.

“Since we are a chamber that represents businesses, we should try to give an award to a business instead of an individual,” she said.

Bluff Brothers Brewing is always trying to help out in the community, which is why it is deserving of this first-ever award, noted Gensmer.

“I think the Bluff Brothers are a very great new business in the community,” she said. “They bring a lot of people in with a lot of their activities and they are constantly evolving with their different events.”

She explained that the business gets a lot of attention, not just from the local community, but also by others from outside the area. The owners are “out-of-the-box thinkers” who work with multiple local nonprofit organizations, even opening their business after hours for events, she added.

In other action at the meeting, Gensmer gave a review of 2023, noting that the Chamber grew in membership, starting 2023 with 71 members and ending with 77.

She also outlined several events that the Chamber holds. The annual Christmas on Historic Broadway Avenue celebration, co-sponsored with Brave Community Theatre, was affected by poor weather, although most events ran on time. However, the money raised through donations was down, “mostly because of the weather,” said Gensmer, as the Chamber usually raises more than $1,000, but brought in just under $800 this year.

The Chamber also sponsored a Cookbook Walk during the event. The Chamber asked businesses to come up with a recipe to share with the public. Businesses had copies of the recipe at their location, or at the library for businesses not open during the event. People were given a cover page, binder and map at the library so they could collect the recipes to fill up their binder.

“I think it was a hit,” said Gensmer. “I heard a lot of people talking about it. ”Next year, the Chamber will increase publicity on the event to get more participation, she added.

As far as ribbon cuttings for new businesses, there were just three in 2023: Smoking Guns Smoke Shop, Grand Meadow License Bureau and the Gateway Cafe in Wykoff. Gensmer said
another will be held soon as Greg Brooks is opening a business in Ostrander.

Tyler Anderson reported on the annual Easter egg hunt, which he said also had weather challenges, so just a few days prior to the planned day of the event, it was moved up to
Saturday instead of Sunday. Despite the late change, the hunt had 145 attendees, which compares to 175 the year before.

Volunteers included Chamber members, people from Good Earth Village, Kingsland students and Miss Minnesota nominees.

The Buy Local Committee had three Spring Valley after-hours events at Marzolf Implement, Pear Ridge Dental and Ody’s Country Meats. Anderson noted that the Chamber is looking for
more hosts from businesses that want to showcase their operation and take part in a networking opportunity.

The Chamber also held the second annual Spring Valley career expo in November in partnership with Kingsland Public Schools.

“There was a big focus on trying to bring the different career options in and wanting to showcase what kids have in their own backyard,” said Anderson. “Sometimes they have no idea
what is going on locally.”

More than 150 students from Kingsland took part in the expo and 20 businesses from all over the area, not just Spring Valley, set up booths. Anderson said the Chamber is working on
growing this event in 2025.

In new business, Gensmer said that Treasurer Wendy Betts, Secretary Tyler Anderson and board member Kerin Rath will be continuing their terms on the Chamber board. Blake Koebke
will not be renewing his term so the board will be looking for a replacement.

Other board members are Vice President Cody Koebke and Alicia O’Connell.

The final event of the evening was a trivia contest featuring items of local interest. The team of Julie Mlinar, Justin Mlinar, and Dave and Pam Phillips won the contest, earning Spring Valley
Bucks that can be used at any Chamber business.

Filed Under: Spring Valley EDA News

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Email: director@springvalleyeda.org

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