This one is a national health care advisory board.
“The price of health care in Iowa is just getting out of sight,” said Solberg, 49, a champion of her Central Heights neighborhood in southwest Mason City. “We’re just trying to get a committee together to see what we can do.”
So typical, said longtime friend Diane Williams, a member of Mason City’s North End Partnership.
“Her energy level and her devotion to whatever she believes in is very, very strong,” Williams said, “and she’ll go out of her way to make sure that things are right and people have been helped. She’s always there for you and she’ll do whatever she can.”
As president of the Central Heights Neighborhood Association, Solberg has spearheaded neighborhood cleanups and helped get grant money to build a shelter house and playground in Dustin Colby Park.
The park honors Colby, a National Guard soldier from Clear Lake who died in an vehicle accident in 2004.
“We just want to make a better place for the citizens out in Central Heights, because I think we get overlooked a lot,” Solberg said. “We’re not as big as the North End Partnership. It just seems like, ‘Ohhh, Central Heights ...’
“We’re always working behind the scenes,” she said. “And I’d like to say that we have the best neighborhood association in Mason City.”
Solberg, a 1977 Northwood-Kensett High School graduate, studied at the former Hamilton College and at North Iowa Area Community College.
Now she sells insurance for Corcoran & Associates Inc. in Mason City, and camper trailers for Gansen Auto & RV in Riceville.
And serves many noble causes. Solberg was a mentor with the North Iowa Youth Task Force and a volunteer with the Community Action for a Renewed Environment (CARE) project.
She volunteers for North Iowa Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA), through which she earned a 2007 Governor’s Volunteer award.
She graduated from the Citizens Police Academy, and is taking a Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) class.
She’s helping Tim Navratil develop his new campground, Lucky’s Last Resort, near Rock Falls, and shoots with the River City Rifle & Pistol Club.
Her boss, Mick Corcoran, comes to Mason City from his Des Moines office about two days a week.
Often when he scans the newspaper he sees Solberg’s name.
“I come in sometimes and I just put my arms up in the air and, you know how you wave, “I’m not worthy! I’m not worthy!’? I do it with Janet probably once a month,” Corcoran said.
“Fifty years from now, when somebody’s reading about Mason City, they’ll read about Janet, and it’ll be nice that I had an opportunity to work with her and get to know her,” he said.
Running for City Council is a possibility
Janet Solberg said she has been urged to run for City Council in Mason City.
The Central Heights neighborhood leader said it’s a possibility.
“I will always entertain the idea of politics,” Solberg said. “That’s the worst thing people can say to me: ‘Oh, you’ll never do that.’ Then I’ll be the first one in the door.
“I really take pride in what I do,” she said. “If it’s something I can be good at, I’ll pursue it. You bet I will.”
— Dick Johnson
Photos, stories sought
Photos and stories are being sought for a book about Central Heights, annexed into Mason City in 1970.
Call Janet Solberg at 641-425-0749 for more information.






4t5ied wrote on Oct 27, 2008 10:35 AM: