GROWING GROWING COMMUNITY COMMUNITY MEDIA,NFP NFP MEDIA, ForestParkReview.com ForestParkReview.com Vol.104, 104,No. No.x4 Vol.
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F O R E S T PA R K
REVIEW JANUARY 27, 2021
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Council approves Altenheim demolition grant No ‘cloak and dagger conspiracy’ in $750K plans By MARIA MAXHAM Editor
Several members of the village council directly shot down the notion that secret plans for the Altenheim property exist during the Jan. 25 village council meeting. “There’s no cloak and dagger conspiracy,” Commissioner Ryan Nero said in a conversation leading to a unanimous vote on accepting the intergovernmental agreement (IGA) between the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) and the village for $750,000 to demolish the decrepit Altenheim buildings. Mayor Rory Hoskins and Village Administrator Tim Gillian also stated unequivocally that no secret plans are being made. “There’s a group trying to suggest that the mayor and this council already know what they’re going to do with that property. And that’s just flat-out false,” Gillian said. “I wish we had that kind of a crystal ball.” Hoskins agreed, stating that simply because he has a meeting with the nearby CTA, for example, doesn’t mean that anything is automatically going to happen. “It’s just a question of starting the process,” Hoskins said. “There’s no done deal as to what potentially could go into the Altenheim. But until these hazardous buildings come down, it’s really hard to do anything with the property.” Based on what he’s heard, said Nero, there are no plans for any particular development on the property. “So rest assured, all those residents who are lisSee ALTENHEIM on page 6
ALEX ROGALS/Staff Photographer
PATIENTS FIRST: Dr. Natasha Diaz (left) examines Waits Longbrake at Roots Health DPC on Madison Street.
Direct primary care practice opens on Madison
‘Profit can’t come before patient care’ By MARIA MAXHAM Editor
When Dr. Natasha Diaz, who opened Roots Health DPC on Madison Street in August, went to medical school at the University of Illinois, she did it to fix
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what she saw as a broken medical system. She envisioned a system with transparent pricing that patients knew about before they received services, a system in which people had direct access to their doctors, not just the front desk. She imagined patients creating a relationship with their primary care physicians, establishing trust over years, and doctors who could see patients for
same-day visits, so rushing to an urgent care center where you might see a doctor you’ve never met before wouldn’t be necessary. She didn’t want to see waiting rooms filled with patients flipping through magazines, checking the time every five minutes. In fact, she didn’t want patients to have to wait at all.
D209 going hybrid
Art gallery exhibition
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See NEW DOCTOR on page 4
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