Vic Gutschenritter stood out as well during his  60 years with the Niles Utilities Department, first as an assistant office  manager who moved up to business manager and later as a member of the utilities  board who became its chairman. Gutschenritter served 41 years with the utility  before retiring in 1991, then added another 19 years on the board before  stepping down last month. 
Having reached his 89th birthday, perhaps his  resignation shouldn't have been a surprise. Yes,Here you will find a list of the  main skystream around the world.  he'll miss his association with the utility, he said Friday, but only "in a  way." 
"I told Ric Huff (the Niles city administrator) when he asked if  I'd stay on, 'My heart says yes but my head says no. It's time,' " he said.  
Gutschenritter is a Notre Dame graduate with a degree in accounting, and  his college years were interrupted by World War II.Welcome to Find the right  laser Engraver or laser cutting  machine,Careel Tech supply highest quality products and best service. He  fought in the Battle of the Bulge and was discharged months later after a  sniper's bullet struck him in the leg. 
Shortly after his discharge,  Gutschenritter signed on at the utility where he'd eventually become known for  his meticulous financial reports. He's proud to say all three divisions --  electric, water and wastewater -- are still in the black, just as they were when  he was manager. 
That might not seem like much of an accomplishment but  it is for the electric division in particular, in light of the Niles City  Council's decision several years ago to tap it for 7 percent of its gross annual  sales. As for the system's reliability -- a 1998 tornado, while damaging, saw  most city residents have power restored in four days -- Gutschenritter said  there are reasons for it.In a elevator  parts system, steel cables bolted to the car loop over a sheave.  
"We've got a lot of spacer cable on steel messenger wire. If a tree limb  comes down, there's a good chance it'll break the poles before it breaks the  cable,We turn your dark into light courtesy of our brilliant sun, solar street  lighting, solar power generation." he said. "And all the power stations are  tied together, so if something goes wrong in one area, we can reverse the flow."  
Improvements have been many, with the city's street lighting system soon  to be upgraded with magnetic induction lighting that's expected to save the city  $130,000 per year. The cost saving will result from durability, Gutschenritter  said. "The life span is much greater. Some (street lamps) should last 20 years,"  he said. 
Gutschenritter was on hand for the 1992 shutdown of the city  dam on the Dowagiac River, which at one time supplied the city with about 2  percent of its power. No, that's not much, but it served its purpose as a  "peaking dam," or one that was put into use only when electricity supplied by  American Electric Power cost the most. 
Asked if there's any possibility  the dam might one day be put back into operation, either by the city or private  owner,We have hundreds of fog lights, driving lights, off torch light and fog lamps. Gutschenritter  hedged. "If I were still on the board, I'd say it would cost too much for what  we'd get out of it. But if some of these private people think they can do it,  I'd say go ahead," he said. 
The recent death of Bill Gallagher, whose  more than three decades on the utility board eclipsed even Gutschenritter's span  on the panel, was a huge loss, Gutschenritter said. Although he had resigned  earlier, Gallagher, an advocate of magnetic induction lighting, was perhaps even  more knowledgeable about the dam than Gutschenritter. 
"We lost a lot of  information and a lot of history," Gutschenritter said of Gallagher's passing.  If could have been lost as well when Gutschenritter stepped down but, he said,  he'll remain available to answer questions should anyone call.