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10 minute read
Cover story
from DC_Midweek_083122
by Shaw Media
STORM SURGE
Community helps bail out flooded DeKalb Area Women’s Center
By CAMDEN LAZENBY
clazenby@shawmedia.com
DeKALB – The DeKalb Area Women’s Center is dealing with thousands of dollars in expenses after excess stormwater seeped into the basement of its building during a rainstorm this month.
Anna Marie Coveny, a leader at the women’s center, said the rain came down so hard in such a short period of time that it overwhelmed the storm sewers, even with two rain gardens out front.
“But the groundwater, the ground was saturated, the groundwater needed someplace to go and it seeped up through the cracks in the cement floor in our basement,” Coveny said.
Coveny said a Zumba instructor was the first to discover, what at the time, was 7 inches of water pooled in the basement. Once Coveny came with the help of plumbers and their water pumps, the water had already receded but the damage to the underbelly of the 105-year-old building, and many of the items stored there, had already been done.
At the time, everything was damp and Coveny said some things were actually sopping wet, so air movers and dehumidifiers were brought in to prevent mold from growing. Now Coveny worries the center is going to have a huge electric bill.
“We have no way of estimating what that is but running day and night 30 air movers and three dehumidifiers is going to be a whopper of an electric bill. So that’s part of what we need to do fundraising for,” Coveny said.
As far as expenses go, the DeKalb Area Women’s Center owes so far $4,050 to Service Master Commercial Cleaning Services but the buck doesn’t stop there.
“We really need to have a sump pump pit dug and a sump pump installed with an ejection system that will get the water out before it can spread over the floor again,” Coveny said. “I believe it will take months before that happens and again we have to figure where the money is coming from because I’m not willing to write a check that bounces.”
Coveny said the DeKalb Area Women’s Center expects to receive $1,250 in emergency grant funding from the DeKalb County Community Foundation. As of Aug. 24, the center also has been given two donations from organization members who each contributed $300.
Camden Lazenby – clazenby@shawmedia.com A section of wall cut out to prevent mold from growing in the basement of the DeKalb Area Women’s Center is seen Wednesday, Aug. 24.
Enter the volunteers
Over the past few weeks, Coveny reckons the center has been graced with volunteers more than two dozen times. The majority of the work done by those volunteers have so far involved bringing water-logged items out of the basement and into the sun to dry off. Everything from filing cabinets and ruined furniture to the building’s deed and old blueprints of the hall needed to be brought out and sorted.
“We can’t just throw out the damp papers,” Coveny said. “We need to look and see, do we have the deed to the building, do we have the the paperwork for the IRS nonprofit status, do we have the paperwork for the state of Illinois nonprofit status?”
The center asked for volunteers to help with the flood recovery from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Aug. 24 and Aug. 25 and then from 9 a.m. until noon Aug. 26 and Aug. 27.
Lisa Shelton, who works with Safe Passage in DeKalb, said she came out when she heard the center needed help. Shelton said a lot of people come out and help Safe Passage so she likes to match those efforts by going out and helping where she can as well.
“I’m no stranger to flooding,” Shelton said. “I grew up in a house that flooded a couple of times so it’s nothing I haven’t seen before, but we definitely need as much help as we can get. That would be very helpful.”
Shelton said considering the building is more that a century old, and the women’s center has occupied it for almost three decades, there’s a lot of historical value in some of the stuff that was impacted by the flood.
“So the sooner we can get it out of the mustiness and dry some of it out, hopefully some of it can be saved and preserved,” said Shelton.
Ann Mueller, another volunteer, said she supports the center. Since she’s retired, she had time to help out when the call for volunteers went out to the community.
“It’s important to have a space like this, so I’m really appreciative of the work they do here,” Mueller said.
“That’s pretty upsetting, to have so much damage done and so much work that needs to be done to restore this wonderful historical building,” said Mueller. “I’m just happy to do the little bit that I can do.”
Michelle Perkins said she came out to volunteer because she thinks the DeKalb Area Women’s Center is a great organization with a great cause.
“For me, as a tree hugger, the hardest part was seeing all the garbage,” Perkins said, who’s volunteered twice since Aug. 24. “Seeing all the stuff that’s damaged and trying to be resourceful with how we can recycle, reuse and not just put things in landfills – so it’s always just, it’s just devastating.”
She heralded her fellow volunteers as they cleared the space.
“No. 1 the physical labor and what you have to expend to get this done, to clean up, is amazing, and that’s just the beginning. Just getting the damaged goods out, let alone putting it back together,” Perkins said.
Perkins, a lifetime DeKalb resident, said she’s always heard of the women’s center but didn’t have any involvement with the organization prior to her volunteer work last week. She said it feels good to be involved.
“Anytime you’re working with an organization like this its funding, donations, even skill, if someone can donate skill that’s always appreciated,” said Perkins. “Any type of disaster like this just cripples organizations, so be aware, be kind and give back.”
Moving past the flood
All flood issues considered, the DeKalb Area Women’s Center continues to host its weekly open house from 7 to 9 p.m. Fridays, Coveny said. Save a series of sign and collage making workshops, the regular programming during those Friday evening events have turned into a time for more work dealing with flood damage to be done.
Coveny said the areas where carpet used to adorn the floors of the center’s basement won’t be replaced because of the risk of another flood in the absence of a sump pump. But she hopes some of the original hardwood in the basement can be saved.
The center also gives away free winter clothes on the Saturday before Thanksgiving. Despite the flood, that event is still expected to go off like normal in two and a half months.
“That’s kind of my goal, that we don’t have the musty odor anymore for the coat drive,” Coveny said. “And it is really a gratifying experience to do that,” said Coveny, who noted the clothes are given to anyone who shows up, no questions asked.
“I would like people to know that our mailbox is open for checks,” Coveny said.
She said anybody who’s interested in helping with the flood recovery can mail a check made out to DeKalb Area Women’s Center, to 1021 State St., DeKalb IL 60115.
“And the good thing that I have to say today, is that it wasn’t sewer backup, sewage backup it was not, and so it was storm sewer instead,” Coveny said.
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Camden Lazenby – clazenby@shawmedia.com Ann Mueller watches Michelle Perkins sort through a waterlogged box in the basement of the DeKalb Area Women’s Center on Wednesday, Aug. 24.
Anna Marie Coveny
a leader at the DeKalb Area Women’s Center
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Mark Busch – mbusch@shawmedia.com DeKalb Police Chief David Byrd (right) talks to DeKalb and Northern Illinois University police officers at the scene of a shooting Wednesday, Aug. 24, at West Ridge Apartments in DeKalb. Police: DeKalb man charged with murder
18-year-old dead from gunshot wound to head
By KELSEY RETTKE
krettke@shawmedia.com
DeKALB – An 18-year-old DeKalb man was fatally shot in the head outside an apartment complex Wednesday, Aug. 24, and a DeKalb man has been charged with his murder, police reported Thursday, Aug. 25.
Michael H. Howard, 25, of DeKalb is charged with first-degree murder in the shooting, the third in a string of unrelated gun violence last week, according to a news release from the DeKalb Police Department.
DeKalb Police Chief David Byrd confirmed the death about 1 p.m. Aug. 25, and more details were released by the police department later that day.
The victim’s identification has not been released. The DeKalb County Coroner’s Office confirmed the victim also was from DeKalb.
The shooting occurred about 4:15 p.m. outside an apartment building at West Ridge Apartments in the 900 block of Ridge Drive, Byrd said. When officers arrived, they found a man lying on the sidewalk outside an apartment building suffering from an apparent gunshot wound to the head. Officers began to perform CPR life-saving measures until paramedics arrived. The man was taken to Northwestern Medicine Kishwaukee Hospital in serious condition, where he died of his injuries.
Officers were alerted to a suspect – identified as Howard – after he left a vehicle in the area, although he evaded police capture until Aug. 25, according to the release. Howard was located in Chicago, where he was arrested and detained by the Chicago Police Department, according to the release.
As a result – mirroring responses to a separate, unrelated shooting midday Monday, Aug. 22, during which a teenager was shot blocks from an elementary school – nearby DeKalb High School and Jefferson Elementary School were placed on a brief lockdown Wednesday evening “out of an abundance of caution,” DeKalb School District 428 officials wrote in a social media post.
Nearby schools in District 428 brought anyone outside into school buildings, and no one was allowed to enter during the community emergency protocol, which was lifted about 6 p.m.
DeKalb police, including Byrd, and officers from Northern Illinois University remained on the scene for several hours Wednesday.
“I believe this was more of a targeted incident,” Byrd said Aug. 24.
It’s the third shooting where injuries have been reported throughout DeKalb’s north side since Aug. 22. A male teenager injured on a sidewalk near Eighth and East Taylor streets – near Founders Elementary School – was taken to Kishwaukee Hospital and then transferred to OSF Saint Anthony’s in Rockford. Two DeKalb teens, ages 13 and 14, face criminal charges from the incident, police announced Aug. 25. The 13-year-old is charged with attempted murder, authorities said.
And Tuesday night, Aug. 23, a woman was shot just a block over on Ridge Drive during an incident initially reported as domestic in nature. However, Byrd said Wednesday that police believe the shooting occurred after an isolated argument. A suspect in that incident also remains at large.
Byrd said authorities have increased police patrols in the area, although that’s not a new protocol. He said the DeKalb Police Department is in the process of hiring more officers to help increase police visibility.
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