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Cabin Fever Players’ sly drama, the vintage “Radio Show” from the golden age of radio, wraps up Friday evening, August 16, after three performances on the stage at Lake City Arts’ Mary Stigall Theater.The play is directed by Jodi Linsey who multi-tasks as not only director but also stage sound effects.Based on the clever standup dialogue of radio shows from the 1940s and 50s — complete with advertisements for luxurious hair balm and other must-haves of the period, each of the actors recites their lines with gusto. Not all of the dialogue is comedy, although deadpan Donny Rightsell and elastic-faced Brian Poet deliver standout performances reciting Abbott and Costello’s hilarious “Who’s on First” exchange.Rightsell, a director of Lake City Arts, is a mainstay in this summer’s Arts’ performances, first for his vocals in the 1960’s pageant “Still Feelin’ Groovy” earlier this summer and now stellar in both drama and comedy dialogue for “Radio Show.” In Addition to “Who’s on First?” Rightsell’s deadpan dialogue is at once nuanced and menacing as General Zaroff opposite Poet in “Most Dangerous Game.” Charming to Lake City audiences is the three-woman combo composed of chatty Jane, played by 1940s-quaffed Melanie Merrill, with wide-eyed ingenue Ava Wingard in the role of Irma in the ghostly comic dialogue “My Friend Jane”. Other memorable performances in “Jane” are supplied by Camille Richard with bright Irish brogue as landlord Mrs. O’Riley, Rightsell as the Maestro, Bill Goodwin as Irma’s humorless boss, and deep-voiced, mustachioed Celeste Scott in her departing role as the announcer. In a typical exchange between Wingard’s naive Irma and her law office boss, sternly played by the unsmiling Goodwin, Goodwin dismisses a ghostly sighting as “Nothing but an apparition,” Wingard’s Irma in return observing “well, that’s just ridiculous…none of us have ever had surgery!”Also, memorable and laugh-laden are Melanie Merrill and Goodwin in their roles as Liz and George Cooper in “My Favorite Husband,” Celeste Scott returning as the intently stern policeman.
During the Wednesday, August 7, Town of Lake City Board of Trustees meeting, trustees unanimously approved town staff to request an Energy/Mineral Impact Assistance Fund (EIAF) grant through the Department of Local Affairs (DOLA) in the amount of $375,000 for the impending Wastewater Treatment Plant (WWTP) Renovation Project.In her bi-monthly report, Town Engineer Joanne Fagan provided details for the trustees as to how the project is progressing. She reported that Ridgway Valley Enterprises (RVE), a concrete contractor out of Montrose, provided a preliminary cost estimate in late July, and that town staff had been working to refine the project’s scope and budget. Fagan was able to identify both items that were missing from the scope, as well as items not needed, but reported that despite being able to trim it back some, the first estimate far exceeded the town’s preliminary budget.RVE initially intended to charge overhead on both materials and equipment, so in order to economize, staff suggested Town of Lake City directly purchase more expensive items, including fixed film modules, blowers, aeration equipment and covers, and Fagan reports that RVE is supportive of the plan.Fagan said, “The aeration system in RVE’s original quote was from the same company as the fixed film, Entex. Cost for that Entex equipment doubled between when I got quotes in December and the numbers given to RVE. We have not found an alternate supplier, but there are less expensive and more efficient ways to aerate so a much less expensive aeration system is being proposed.”After several drafts back and forth and working out details with suppliers, Fagan reports that she and town staff have the cost estimate for construction of the WWTP Renovation Project, including project management/engineering down to $5.6 million from the initial $6.2 million, with 5 percent contingencies.In order to arrive at that number, Fagan chose a less expensive aeration system, which in her report she called, “a better fit for the plant, although it does add another vendor into the mix.” She also chose less expensive piping materials and decided existing bypass lines could be reused rather than replaced. “RVE is also considering fabricating some of the structures in their shop, under our observation, to save money,” she said. Fagan is also considering the postponement of purchasing aspirators and generators for the plant but stated in her report that the $5.6 million cost estimate does include those purchases.“Even with all the negotiations and changes,” said Fagan, “the project cost will exceed the projected project budget by $1.1 million. We had been talking about the project as around a $5 million project but had been waiting to look for additional funding until we had a better idea of the actual project cost. To fill the shortfall, staff has applied for supplemental Energy Impact funding and additional State Revolving Fund (SRF) loan funds. We plan to ask for loan funds to cover the full shortfall if the Energy Impact funds do not come through. SRF funds are in short supply, but we learned this morning that they believe they could meet our needs. We also plan to reapply for Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) funds for the generator and are applying for several other potential grants.”The bottom line is, as Fagan stated in the August 7 meeting, “the longer we keep not getting it done, the more the price goes up.”
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