Beecher Police Records Clerk Linda Krug to Retire After 27 Years
Article Summary: Linda Krug, a Police Department Records Clerk for the Village of Beecher, is retiring after 27 years of dedicated service. Police Chief Terry Lemming praised Krug as a “model employee” and a great person who will be deeply missed by the department.
Beecher Police Department Key Points:
-
Records Clerk Linda Krug is retiring after nearly three decades with the village.
-
Chief Terry Lemming described her as a dedicated, great person and a valued employee.
-
Krug’s institutional knowledge proved essential recently when she returned from vacation to help with several new issues that had arisen in her absence.
BEECHER – After 27 years of service to the Village of Beecher, Police Department Records Clerk Linda Krug is retiring.
The announcement was made by Police Chief Terry Lemming during the June 23 village board meeting. Lemming praised Krug for her long and dedicated career with the village.
“She’s a model employee, great person to work with,” Lemming said. “Great person, great employee, really going to miss her.”
Lemming highlighted Krug’s importance to the department’s operations, noting that her absence was immediately felt during a recent vacation. When several new situations arose, her institutional knowledge was essential upon her return.
“She was gone for a week last week on vacation and when she came back, Sadie had a million questions for us because we had a couple things come up that had not come up before,” Lemming recalled. “So, she has just always been there for us, dedicated to the village and just a really good person.”
While Krug has requested not to have a party or celebration to mark her retirement, Lemming indicated the department plans to honor her service anyway.
Latest News Stories
Beecher Fire District Approves Amended Budget, Renews Paramedic Contract
Illinois AI regulations have mild industry support, could draw federal ire
DOJ files complaint to block Minnesota climate lawsuit
Hegseth: Ceasefire holds despite Iranian aggression
Illinois Quick Hits: Mayors to visit capitol urge protection of local funding
Despite tax revolt, Lower Merion keeps administrator pay high
Supreme Court allows Louisiana to immediately move on drawing new map
Glock can’t appeal judge’s greenlighting of Chicago’s ‘switches’ suit: Judge
After Fifth Circuit ruling on TX border security law, ACLU sues to stop it from going into effect
Colorado legislators back psychedelic drug research
Trump tells small business owners tariffs ‘aren’t high enough’
Pennsylvania has the most Democrats in ‘Red to Blue’ campaign