Unanimous vote welcomes Mint’s dispensary at Harlem and Roosevelt
By JESSICA MORDACQ Staff Reporter
What will be the third dispensary in Forest Park has been approved at 7207 Roosevelt Road, making it the second marijuana business in four months that’s been okayed to open in town. At the last village council meeting, commissioners unanimously voted to grant Mint IL LLC’s dispensary a conditional use permit. The permit allows the dispensary to open in a commercial district, whereas the village’s
Park District of Forest Park celebrated 90
ERICA BENSON
DISPENSARY
zoning code only allows dispensaries in industrially zoned areas
While only one Forest Park resident gave public comment at the meeting, six attended a Planning and Zoning Commission meeting in September to denounce the proposed dispensary. Among their anxieties were those about increased traffic in an area that already has safety concer ns
“This is easily one of the most dangerous areas for traffic in all of Forest Park,” said Jackie Walsh Lundt, who lives in the 1200 block of South Elgin Avenue, at the last village council meeting. “There have been constant accidents and incidents,” most recently on Nov. 13, when an accident in the intersection caused bumper-to-bumper traffic several blocks north.
“Daily, there are cars going the wrong way down our street, trying to avoid traffic at Harlem,” Walsh Lundt added.
In addition to her concern about the ne gative safety, traffic and parking impacts of the 2,000-square-foot dispensary, Walsh Lundt said the dispensary at this location paints the wrong picture.
“A cannabis dispensary next to a well-established pediatric dentist for the area might not be covered under the law as written, but common sense tells one that this is a bad idea,” she said. “If the requirements for locating a dispensary near a school is 500 feet, why does the village think that this location is the best fit for this type of business?”
Before voting to give the Mint dispensary a conditional use permit, every commissioner addressed residents’ worries.
“We [will] continue to work with business owners that have successfully done this to make sure that we are creating an environment that is receptive and responsive to residents’ concerns,” said Commissioner of Streets and Public Improvement Michelle Melin-Rogovin of those opening near high-traffic areas in town. “We don’t want to solve problems before they happen, but we’re going to let you know that we’re aware of the concern, and we’re going to be attentive to the needs of the people that live there.”
Melin-Rogovin added that village staf f are working with the Traffic Safety Commission re garding safety concerns at the intersection of Harlem and Roosevelt. Melin-Rogovin, Director of the Department of Public Health and Safety Steve Glinke, and Police Chief Ken Gross are looking at traf fic data collected from the intersection.
According to that data, the intersection saw 5% of Forest Park’s crashes last year, Glinke said.
In hopes that the corner’s new dispensary doesn’t add to that number, cars will only be able to exit the parking lot tur ning right on Harlem or right on Roosevelt.
At an October meeting where the PZC recommended the village council approve the dispensary’s conditional use permit, Omar Fakhouri – co-owner of Mint IL LLC, which operates a cannabis cultivation plant in Forest Park at 7550 Industrial Dr. – presented a traffic impact statement conducted by Kenig, Lindgren, O’Hara, Aboona Inc. of Rosemont. The statement found that the dispensary would increase traffic on adjacent roadways by less than 1%.
As for safety concer ns as they might relate to crime, commissioners said, based on what they’ve seen from other dispensaries, there’s nothing that links marijuana businesses to increases in unwanted behavior. In fact, required measures like cameras, security and lighting often increase safety around a dispensary.
“We’re especially looking forward to that at a different location, where it’s more of an upgrade than a downgrade,”
Commissioner of Public Health and Safety Ryan Nero said of security benefits at the cor ner of Harlem and Roosevelt.
But commissioners also alluded to Mint potentially being the last dispensary in town for a while.
“I think now might be a good time to sort of pause and see how these three establishments do, evaluate how it’s
working in the community,” said Commissioner of Public Property Jessica Voogd. “I don’t believe that, the way our ordinance is written right now, there’s any sort of limit or cap. So I would just invite or welcome thinking about that and some discussion.”
Commissioner of Accounts and Finance Maria Maxham said she ag reed completely with Voogd.
“I think there is going to be some cannibalization of the market, which obviously is going to impact the dispensary, not us necessarily as a village,” Maxham said. “But then there might not be enough incentive for them to want to stay open in this location.”
Maxham added that future discussions about capping the number of dispensaries in Forest Park are necessary because of the pressure commissioners often feel to pass something that the PZC has recommended they approve.
“We’re often told that, as a council, if we say no to something that gets approved conditionally through the PZC, then it puts us at legal risk of being sued because we said no to someone who met the requirements,” she said.
It remains to be seen when those discussions might take place. With the village council’s approval of the conditional use permit, the final green light for Mint’s dispensary will come from the state.
Site of Mint’s cannabis dispensary at Harlem and Roosevelt, Forest Park’s third and possibly nal dispensary
A Feast Of Carols: A Festive Concert in Honor of Paul Lindblad
Sun., Nov. 24, 4 - 5:15 p.m., St. John Lutheran Church
Join the Oak Park Concert Chorale for a festive concert of unique carol arrangements, featuring works by Paul Lindblad, Harvey Hahn, and Paul Ayers, alongside classics like “Jesus Christ the Apple Tree” and “In the Bleak Mid-Winter.” Tickets: $20 General Admission, $12 Seniors/Students, Free for ages 12 & under. Tickets available at the door or online. 305 Circle Ave., Forest Park
Holiday Trip: Nutcracker Ca stle and Wreath Decorating
Wednesday, Nov. 27, 7 a.m. - 7:30 p.m.,
Howard Mohr Community Center
Start the holiday season with a festive day trip to Wisconsin. Experience the enchanting Nutcracker Castle, then enjoy lunch before heading to the Wreath Factor y, where you’ll have the oppor tunity to personally decorate your own live Christmas wreath. For reser more information, call 708-771-7737. 7640 Jackson Blvd., Forest Park
Silent Reading Part y at Kribi Co ee
Friday, Nov. 22, 6 p.m., Kribi Co ee Air Roastery
Join us for a unique and peaceful experience as readers gather in the Ubuntu Lounge at Kribi Co ee for a silent reading par ty. Enjoy a calm and communal atmosphere while reading your favorite books and connecting with fellow book lovers. 7324 Madison St., Forest Park
A Tribute to Otis Redding with The Heav y Sounds
Saturday, Nov. 23, at 8 p.m., Rober t’s Westside
Join us for an night as The Heav y Sounds, featuring Renaldo Domino, Gina Bloom, and Michael Aver y, pay tribute to the legendary Otis Redding. Celebrate the soul and music of this iconic ar tist in an energetic and moving performance. 7321 Madison St., Forest Park
Peyote Stitch with Noelle Garcia
turday, Nov. 23, 1 - 2 p.m., Forest Park Public Library
Based in the Chicago area, Noelle Garcia is an artist and educator who focuses on themes of identity, family history recovered narratives in her work. She is an indigenous tist from the Klamath and Paiute tribes. Noelle will lead a orkshop on the Indigenous art form of the tubular Peyote stitch. Each attendee will learn how to make a unique bengal . 7555 Jackson Blvd., Forest Park
Espresso Cafe is Forest Park’s new co ee pitstop
e shop also plans to o er handmad empanadas, sweets and sandwiches
By SAM TUCKER Contributing Reporter
A new coffee shop opened in last month that offers strong brew made pastries, and handmade empanadas, run by a family team.
Fer nando Silva, the owner, said he’s been eyeing the building he opened Espresso Cafe in for about 14 years. Silva previously worked in an office building along Roosevelt Road and said he always found himself traveling far for a cup of coffee. After buying the space and renovating it for the last twoand-half years, Silva opened the family-run shop Oct. 19.
Their espresso is a mix between Columbian, Guatemalan and Brazilian beans. All their coffee roasts are from WhirlWind Coffee Company, a local coffee supplier. Silva said they focus on bringing good quality coffee that is consistent for their customers.
“They[customers] know what they want, and that makes our life easier. They get happy, and they love the coffee not just because it’s local, but because it’s good coffee,” Fernando Silva said.
Silva’s daughter makes all of the pastry items sold at the shop, including guava and cheese Danishes, cookies, and churro cupcakes. Espresso cafe also has sandwiches and empanadas, all made in-house by the family team. The sandwich menu includes combinations like their cold “burrata caprese” and their “cafe original”, an Italian-style sandwich with mortadella and capicola. All the sandwiches are made fresh daily.
Different fresh pastries fill their counters every day, but items like Danishes and cookies are mainstays in the menu. On the coffeemenu, a light-roast and dark-roast drip coffee alternates daily among the usual lineup of hot and iced lattes and espresso coffees.
Silva is a graphic designer by trade, and said that he’s always wanted to open either a cafe or restaurant. In 2019, he attended the Texas Coffee School, a coffee-shop business
Your
and barista training school in Texas, to lear n how to open a coffee shop of his own.
Silva’s son, David, is a certified barista and is Espresso Cafe’s head barista. He said they are proud to offer local, good coffee and they have a clear vision on what they want to provide.
“I want us to have high quality coffee. I want to say it’s good and consistent. I want customers, every single time they come in, to notice the same high quality,” David Silva said. “We obviously try our best to make it local. We’re not ashamed or trying to hide away our coffee distributor.”
Since opening, Fer nando Silva said he has seen some familiar faces at the coffee-shop counter. He used to coach soccer in the area, and David attended Forest Park-area schools Espresso Cafe is working on a fundraiser in early December to raise funds for the schools, and also plans to hang and sell artwork from local artists in the cafe space.
Fer nando Silva said they are settling into their location in Forest Park, and are gauging customer interest in all their different cafe offerings. He said he looks towards scaling up the business and expanding in the future.
“It’s good to know that we can bring good coffee to this area. But, when I decided to open this coffee shop, it was always in my mind to open a second or third coffee shop This is the basic one, so we’ll see how people respond, and then see if we can have others in different places,” Fer nando Silva said.
Espresso Cafe is located at located at 7501 Roosevelt Road
NATURAL FUN
Walk, bike or run: With 350 miles of trails, this is where to get outside and get
SAM TUCKER
David Silva, head barista, prepares a drink.
Stormy Daniels:
‘I’m not done making bad choices’
By GREGG VOSS Contributing Reporter
By her own admission, public speaking isn’t Stor my Daniels’ forte.
But she manages j ust fin e, mostly bec ause she has a l ifetime of stories to draw from across her professional and personal spectrum.
That doesn’t mean it’s easy, though.
“I only remember about half of what I said up there,” Daniels said in an interview after her standup comedy performance Thursday at Comedy Plex, 1128 Lake St., Oak Park
So why is the adult entertainment star, whose prior involvement with Presidentelect Donald Trump is well told, involved in comedy?
“The real answer is spite,” she said. “It makes them mad.”
“Them” could have many meanings, and you can probably draw your own conclusions if you follow the news. But at the outset Thursday, in front of a crowd that decidedly skewed middle age, her goal was to set the record straight about all those rumors about her.
And boy, did she, in a roughly 40-minute session.
“I’m a man,” she offered as an example, eliciting guffaws. “I’m a sex trafficker. I’m riddled with STDs and will die of AIDS. You sold this story to launch your strip career
“Yeah … I woke up at 40 and said, ‘I have a dream.’”
It didn’t stop there. With re gard to the current, very recent state of politics, she said this:
“Who’d you vote for?” she said. “You had one (expletive) job. Someone dropped the ball.”
Daniels wasn’t afraid to tell the crowd that she is indeed a Re publican. That’s not a rumor.
Wait, what?
She answered why in a roughly 15-minute question-and-answer session with audience members after her routine
“Because it makes them so mad,” she said. “I’m that petty.”
It wasn’t all politics. A short video that preceded her taking the stage noted she is, among other things, a mother, a wife, an actress and a director. In other words, there’s more than meets the eye, and a lot more than
any rumor can hold
Daniels’ comedic style is frank storytelling, and yes, it incorporated almost as many F-bombs as jokes. Case in point was the meet-and-greet she conducted about an hour before showtime with a small group of fans who paid for the front-row platinum package.
Daniels simply sat in a chair and chatted up the group.
In other words, she was engaging.
“Speaking in public, I’m terrified,” she said, noting that conventional “wisdom” dictates someone scared of that should imagine the audience, well, naked
“You think that works for me?” she said.
She also dished on her purported tell-all book, Full Disclosure, including all the stuff that apparently got left out. She’s planning a second book, among other writing ventures
“The most important thing about the first book I learned is people don’t read,” she said.
A sad commentary on society, perhaps, but she definitely wasn’t Debbie Downer, especially when it came to her views on the adult entertainment industry. She’s a director, which means she’s responsible for all details, including everything from booking talent to scheduling the film crew and location, and reviewing scripts.
It’s a lot of work and responsibility. But here’s one observation you might not expect.
“Some of the smartest, brightest, brilliant girls are in the industry,” she said.
Daniels’ opening act was Greg Studley, who has performed at big Los Angeles comedy venues such as The Comedy Store and The Improv The pair played off each other well during the Q&A session.
“I j ust told 30 minutes of jo kes, ” S tudley said.
“Is that what it was?” Daniels deadpanned The questions in the Q&A ranged from politics — “‘Why did you decide to testify against Donald Trump?’ I was subpoenaed.” — to her general advice on life.
“Use sunscreen?” she said. “Eat your vegetables?”
So what’s next for Stor my Daniels? Comedy Plex was the last stop on her most recent tour, so a break is in order.
One thing’s for sure, though.
She’s just getting started.
“ I’m not d one making bad choice s, ” she said. “ I’m definitely not d one doing d umb (expletive). ”
Village plans to remove 26 unhealthy, unsafe trees
e project is funded by a $22K grant from Trees Forever
By JESSICA MORDACQ Staff Reporter
A project to remove 26 damaged or unsafe trees around Forest Park is underway and expected to be completed by the end of the year, weather permitting.
The removal of unhealthy trees promotes the safety of residents, since these trees are more dangerous in storms, when their branches are likely to fall.
Earlier this year, Sal Stella, director of the Public Works Department, connected with Trees Forever. The organization’s Illinois Community Canopy-Tree Removal Partnership Grant pays for the removal of 26 to 30 trees and for their stumps to be ground down.
The tree removals come following Forest Park’s preliminary inventory of 3,335 trees in 2022. After an arborist surveyed the vil-
lage’s trees, a management plan was created, outlining suggestions for a handful of trees to make sure they stayed healthy, and came down if they weren’t.
Before Forest Park was awarded the $22,482 grant, Trees Forever also sent out an arborist to analyze those trees
“Each tree on the inventory has infor mation based on anything that’s a risk level, the condition of the tree, what the arborist recommends should be done to the tree,” Stella said at the Nov. 12 village council meeting prior to the vote by commissioners to accept the grant.
While explaining the grant, Stella said he’s seen residents write disgruntled comments on Facebook about their trees coming down. He even addressed a public comment from a June village council meeting, when Forest Parker Nancy Greco said she was displeased to find a tree on her property cut down, instead of trimmed, like signs on her block advertised.
“Imagine my dismay when I got home to witness the horror that happened,” Greco said at the June meeting. “My beautiful Silver Maple tree was cut to shreds, a 100-year-
plus-old tree.”
Greco said village staff told her the tree was diseased, but it was only two years ago when she hired McAdam Landscaping to inspect it. Workers told Greco in June that the tree had decay at the top, which she said should just require some pruning
“We’re not just going around taking trees down that are alive because we’re a Tree City USA community,” Stella said. The village was awarded the recognition by the Arbor Day Foundation in 2021.
As a condition of Tree Forever’s grant, Forest Park must remove the agreed upon trees, take a photo of where they once stood for Tree Forever and provide them with a list of the trees, including their locations, when they were removed, and their species. They must give the same information for the village’s plans to replant the trees, which Tree Forever can help create. Those requirements must be completed by the end of next year
Stella said about 20 trees have been cleared so far and hopes the remainder will be completed by the end of the year, but that will come down to weather
Not Forever
■ A White Ash at 1110 Desplaines
■ A Norway Maple at 901 Dunlop
■ An Elm at 7637 York
■ A Green Ash at 816 Dunlop
■ A Silver Maple at 1047 Ferdinand
■ A Crab Apple at 1001 Ferdinand
■ Three Maples at 946 Beloit
■ A Red Maple at 903 Hannah
■ A Green Ash at 834 Circle
■ A Hawthor n at 7200 Harvard
■ A Norway Maple at 1110 Hannah
■ A Linden at 7428 Harrison
■ A Sugar Maple at 7711 Adams
■ A Norway Maple at 7710 Wilcox
■ A Green Ash at 7556 Jackson
■ A Norway Maple at 621 Hannah
■ An Autumn Blaze at 7242 Jackson
■ A London Planetree at 7242 Jackson
■ A Honey Locust at 7313 Madison
■ A Boxelder at 33 Elgin
■ A Silver Maple at 109 Elgin
■ A Linden at 7233 Dixon
■ A Red Maple at 123 Harlem
■ A Red Maple at 7232 Randolph
Ahh! Rust relief …
Chicago Transit Authority demolishs ou of-use eyesore over th weekend
By JESSICA MORDACQ Staff Reporter
T he old, r usty water tower in the Chicago Transit Authority rail yard at Green Line’s terminus came down the weekend
Forest Park and River Forest residents have long complained about the stories-tall eyesore. According to officials, the village has been trying to get the CTA to take down the water tower for over a decade with no success.
While the CTA has long told surrounding municipalities that they intended to move the water tower, they’ve finally held true to their promise.
“This took years to get the CTA to fast track the water tower’s removal from a larger project to redo the entire CTA site,” Mayor Rory Hoskins said. The CTA plans to redo the rest of the Harlem train ya the future.
The water tower dates back to the 1960s but hasn’t been used to wash train cars that are stored and serviced at the rail yard for years.
The CTA planned and paid for the water tower’s removal — estimated to cost $175,000 — at the northeast corner of Forest Park
STEVE GLINKE
RORY HOSKINS
STEVE GLINKE
Cost of garbage services to increase next year
Bi-monthly trash removal and yard waste rates will also rise in 2026
By JESSICA MORDACQ Staff Reporter
The price to haul your trash, recycling and yard waste away will increase by 4% next year, and again in 2026.
The village council approved an ordinance of Forest Park’s code at the Nov. 12 meeting that raises the bimonthly rate for garbage and recycling removal in 2025 to $43.39 from $41.72 for most residents, and to $31.39 from $26.39 for senior citizen residents. The residential fee for yard waste will rise 23 cents to $5.95, or up 40 cents to $5.39
for senior citizens.
The new rates will go into effect Jan. 1, 2025 as Republic Services, Forest Park’s trash pickup company, increases their prices
In 2026, those costs will rise ag ain.
Trash and recycling services will cost $45.12 for most people, and $32.64 for older folks in 2026. And yard waste will run residents $6.19 and senior citizens $5.60.
In Forest Park, Republic Services picks up garbage, recycling and yard waste on Thursday for those who live south of Madison Street, and on Friday for those residing north of the thoroughfare.
Yard waste is collected between April 1 and through the end of this month. It should be placed in a separate container marked “yard waste” or brown yard waste bag and placed on the curb for weekly pickup
Hazard mitigation plan renewed
e village also updates emergency operations plan
By JESSICA MORDACQ Staff Reporter
Forest Park has signed on to continue participating in Cook County’s multi-jurisdictional hazard mitigation plan.
The village has been a part of it for several years to provide them with financial assistance in the event of an emergency.
Commissioners unanimously voted to approved the resolution at the Nov. 12 village council meeting after Village Administrator Rachell Entler explained the plan.
“Say a tornado swept through multiple jurisdictions and the county needs to come out,” Entler said. “This [plan] would assist us in being able to access grants,” making the village eligible for any financial assistance that the county gets, like from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, she added.
According to recently passed resolution,
FEMA gives grant funding for pre-disaster mitig ation and after-disaster ef for ts through the Hazard Mitigation Assistance Grant program. But to qualify for the program’s grants, jurisdictions must adopt their own hazard mitigation plan and update it every five years.
Entler said Forest Park is working with Cook County to update the village’s individual emergency operations plan, which addresses the village’s hazard mitigation plan and outlines what to do in the event of a natural disaster or crisis.
“One of the events in particular was the CTA shooting that we had,” Entler said at the village council meeting.
While Forest Park has always had an emergency operations plan, it is being updated so the village can receive smaller-scale grants, like one just for an emergency in Forest Park, officials said.
After Forest Park updates its emergency operations plan – which Entler said will take about a year – and it’s approved by the council, village employees will undergo hazard mitig ation training.
The Park District of Forest Park celebrates 90 years
Employee Anthony Hunt looks over some of the historical photographs
Residents and park employees peruse the past.
Aerial views of e Park from 1975 & 2024
Entertainment by e Replays
Photos by ERICA BENSON
CRIME
Armed robbery at Subway, Chipotle parking lot
By JESSICA MORDACQ Staff Reporter
Just before 5 p.m. on Nov. 15, a man wearing all black, including a face mask, came into Subway and ordered a turkey sandwich, according to police. As the employee put the sandwich in a bag, the man pulled out a gun from his waistband and aimed it at the worker. He asked for all of the store’s money. The employee gave him $1,044, which the man put in the sandwich bag and ran away, according to the police re port.
Through surveillance footage, police saw the man get in a black GMC SUV, which they entered in their system as a felony vehicle. According to Deputy Chief of Police Christopher Chin, the vehicle was later stopped by state police, and a man and woman in the car were arrested. They were then brought back to the Forest Park Police Department for investigation and were released. Forest Park detectives are still investigating the case, and forensics is processing a firearm found in the car.
On the same day around 8 p.m., a man robbed two men in the Chipotle parking lot. Police said the two men, despite a language barrier, told them that a man wearing a white shirt and face mask pointed a gun at them and took their wallets, which each had about $400 in them. The man fled across Madison Street, according to street surveillance cameras, and is still at larg e.
Retail theft
Police were dispatched to Walmart Nov. 13 for a retail theft. A woman was caught on camera hiding items in her baby’s diaper bag, then passed the store’s last point of purchase, officials said. She tried to steal more than $290 of diapers, baby for mula and other infant products because, she told police, they were too expensive. She was arrested for one count of retail theft.
Identity theft
A man living on Beloit Avenue came into the police station Nov. 13 to report an identity theft. He told police that, on Nov. 9, he got multiple emails from Verizon about his newly opened account, though he never opened
one, and later got a $140 invoice from Verizon. When he called a re presentative, he was told someone opened an account in his name and to file a police report. The man said he hasn’t seen fraudulent activity on his bank accounts or cards and will sign complaints if the offender is located.
Assault
On Nov. 15, police were dispatched to the 7700 block of Roosevelt Road. Police entered the 7-Eleven, where a man told them he was sitting in his car when another man approached and asked for a lighter. When he told him he didn’t have one, the man became irate, according to the police re port. The suspect got into his car, and the victim followed before the suspect tried to hit him with his car. The victim said he would press charges if the man was located. 7-Eleven employees said the man also asked around the store for a lighter and became irate when no one could provide one.
Unlawful possession of rearms
While on patrol Nov. 16, police pulled over a vehicle that was traveling down the 7700 block of Roosevelt Road at a high speed and switching lanes without a signal. Police smelled cannabis and saw an open bottle of tequila in the back seat. A vehicle search yielded cannabis and two handguns, one of which was later found to be stolen. The driver was arrested for one count of speeding and one count of failure to signal. The passenger, who is also the car’s owner, was charged with unlawful possession of firearms, possession of cannabis outside its approved container, and illegal transportation of alcohol.
These items were obtained from Forest Park Police Department reports dated Nov. 12 - 16 and represent a portion of the incidents to which police responded. Anyone named in these reports has only been charged with a crime and cases have not yet been adjudicated. We report the race of a suspect only when a serious crime has been committed, the suspect is still at large, and police have provided us with a detailed physical description of the suspect as they seek the public’s help in making an arrest
During Donald Trump’s first term as president, Gov. JB Pritzker and Democrats in the Illinois General Assembly spent much of their time enacting laws and policies in direct opposition to the conservative agenda they saw coming from the White House.
Those included the 2019 Re productive Health Act that declared abor tion access to be a “fundamental right” under state law, which lawmakers passed in anticipation that a conservative Supreme Court would eventually overturn Roe v. Wade. It also included numerous head-to-head confrontations with the Trump administration during the COVID-19 pandemic, when Pritzker was ordering public health measures aimed at preventing the spread of the disease while openly criticizing Trump for refusing to do the same
Now, as Trump prepares to take office again, Pritzker and Democratic leaders are bracing themselves for another round of conflict with the White House while planning for legislation and policies to blunt the potential impact of a second Trump administration.
“Over the years ahead, we’ll do more than just protect against the possible reversion to an agenda that threatens to take us backward,” Pritzker said at a Nov. 7 post-election news conference. “We will continue to advance a positive, productive and inclusive agenda of our own, one that brings opportunity to Illinois and helps uplift the nation as a whole.”
Last Wednesday, Pritzker and Colorado Gov. Jared Polis, also a Democrat, announced the formation of Governors Safeguarding Democracy, a coalition they say will focus on protecting against “the dangers of authoritarianism and the undermining” of state-level institutions. That announcement came as lawmakers were convening at the Statehouse for the start of their scheduled two-week fall veto session.
Speaking with re porters last We day, Pritzker said he does not yet ha list of specific measures he wants lawmakers to consider immediately, b some sort of action could come as ear as January, before Trump is sworn into office.
“I haven’t heard anything that has to be addressed right now during this veto session,” he said. “Having said that there is time to be able to do that before the Jan. 20 inauguration.”
Likewise, House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch, D-Hillside, said last Tuesday, the opening day of the veto session, that it was still too early to know exactly what Trump plans to do in his first few days or how the state should respond. But he said Trump’s record during his first term in office, as well as statements he made during the campaign, offer clues about some of the issues that will be important in Illinois.
cause voters were more concerned about bread-and-butter issues like inflation and the economy.
“We have to be prepared to continue to defend our values as Illinoisans and do the things that we know how to do to protect workers, protect women, protect LGBTQ-plus communities, immigrant communities,” Welch said.
Welch also pointed to some of the early moves Trump has made since winning the election as signals about the issues Illinois lawmakers will confront. Those include promises to launch mass deportations of immigrants, suggestions from advisors about eliminating federal employee labor unions, and the naming of for mer Re publican Re p. Lee Zeldin to head the Environmental Protection Agency.
“He appointed a for mer congressman to be head of the EPA who has a 14% record on good environmental legislation,” Welch said. “We have to be concerned about immigration. This country was made and built on immigration. … We have to be concerned with workers’ rights.”
Legislative Re publicans, meanwhile, argued that Trump won the election be-
Citing a recent report showing the state facing a potential $3.2 billion budget deficit in the upcoming fiscal year, GOP leaders said Illinois would be better served if Democrats who control the General Assembly focused more on the state’s own financial condition and less on drawing battle lines with the Trump administration.
Read more: Lawmakers return to Springfield as projected budget deficit looms
“Voters throughout this country have sent a clear message in the last election that they want elected officials to focus on making life more af fordable for American families,” Senate Re publican Leader John Curran, of Downers Grove, said during a news conference Tuesday.”
He said the task will be more challenging in Illinois due to the impending deficit.
“This budget deficit really is a product of Gov. Pritzker and his allies’, year over year, gluttonous appetite for more spending,” Curran said.
While Democrats have said they are prepared to tackle the deficit, they didn’t
give specifics. Sen. Elgie Sims, D-Chicago, who spearheads the budget process in the Senate, told Capitol News Illinois this week there haven’t been any discussions of raising taxes.
Welch acknowledged that Trump will come into office in January with more of a mandate than he had after the 2016 election, when he won a majority of electoral votes but lost the popular vote to Democrat Hillary Clinton.
“The American people did speak, and if you believe in democracy, you have to accept the results of the election,” he said. “But we didn’t elect a dictator. We elected a president of the United States who has to follow the Constitution of the United States. … That Constitution respects people’s fundamental freedoms. That Constitution protects individual rights. That Constitution protects everyone across this country, not just some people, and we have to make sure that he doesn’t go too far.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government covera ge to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCor mick Foundation.
C APITOL NEWS ILLINOIS PHOTO BY JERRY NOWICKI e Illinois State Capitol in Spring eld.
OPINION
OUR VIEW
The third dispensary
The corner of Harlem and Roosevelt is, of course, a very busy intersection for auto traf fic. Has been for decades. Will be long into the future. Not pedestrian-friendly or bike-welcoming, it is built to move cars and does so fairly efficiently. There are accidents. According to traffic data collected by the village of Forest Park, 5% of auto accidents in the village last year took place at that cor ner. Mostly minor collisions, which do inevitably cause good-sized backups.
Two gas stations, a not-very-busy Walgreens, and currently a currency exchange are the commercial anchors of the four corners.
Now, Forest Park’s village council has approved a conditional-use permit that will allow a marijuana dispensary to replace the currency exchange. As we’ve said previously, this is a notable upgrade. A dispensary is a superior revenue generator for a cash-starved village. It is a more modern and sought-after service than a checkcashing service. And the traffic it generates will be comparable to the current uses.
The new permit, vetted by the Planning and Zoning Commission, already restricts exits from the parking lot to right turns onto either Roosevelt or Harlem. As it should
Village council members say they will be attentive to traffic issues and there may be a consensus developing that, with three dispensaries about to be in place in the village, at least an infor mal moratorium on such additional uses should be put in place. That makes sense, as the village lets this still-evolving market shake out some. Meanwhile, this a good outcome.
Removing unhealthy things
Forest Park in recent years has become much more focused on trees. That is a very good thing. They have moved from being an afterthought to being seen as a central part of the experience of living in this small urban village
We’ve watched as the village gover nment has aligned itself with outside resources, some from Morton Arboretum, to inventory its tree stock — there were 3,335 trees in the public way in 2022. The village has also rethought its replanting program to diversify tree species to protect from any specific type of tree disease. The Public Works Department, led by Sal Stella, has become tree-centric and has actively sought outside support for the village’s urban forest. This fall, that effort led to a grant from Trees Forever to actively remove 26 trees on the public way, determined through the tree inventory and arborists to be unhealthy and unsafe. The grant was just over $22,000 and the removals are well underway. This is good management of a precious resource.
Speaking of removal, so long to the rusty, ugly water tower that has loomed over the north side of town for years. Last weekend, the CTA finally made good on its promise to take the unused tower down. It took too long, but we’re glad it is gone
It’s hard to feel thankful when you’re pissed o
The following is a reprint from Nov. 29, 2023:
Have you noticed? It’s hard to feel thankful when you’re angry or resentful, and these days a lot of us are feeling angry.
Steven Webster, a professor of political science, published a piece online a year ago in which he concluded, “American voters are angry.” An NPR poll done four years ago revealed that 84% of the people surveyed said that Americans are angrier today than they were a generation ago. In an online article published two years ago, Kerry Howells asked the question, “How can I be grateful when I feel so resentful?”
Her short answer is a simple, “You can’t.”
HOLMES
“They are mirror opposites of each other,” she explains, “completely opposite states or ways of being.”
So how can we regain some gratitude?
“Firstly,” she concludes, “we need to address any resentment we may have.”
The lens through which I look at reality has been influenced a lot by Alcoholics Anonymous and the Twelve Steps. When alcoholics are confronted with their addictive behavior, they tend to say things like, “OK, maybe I drink too much, but it’s the fault of my wife or boss or parents or the other political party or the Bears having a losing season. Again!”
John Keller was the chief clinical officer of Parkside Medical Services in Park Ridge when he wrote, “From infancy on, we have deep within us three delusional assumptions:
1. I am in control, or ought to be in control, of all that has to do with my life
2. I am at the center of the universe
3. Everything and everyone ought to be spinning around me so I can have what I want and life will be the way I want it to be
When I was an infant, all three of the above were my reality. When I was hungry, all I had to do was whimper a little and my mother sprang into action. I pooped whenever and wherever I wanted
Have you ever witnessed a 2-year-old’s temper tantrum? What do you mean you want me to do what? You want me to hold my poop until I get to the place where it is appropriate to let it go?!
Welcome to the world of social expectations, limits on my behavior, the experience of having a conscience, the necessity of deferring gratification.
We refer to people who don’t learn those things as immature or even infantile
And so I naturally think of Donald Trump. He not
only “poops” whenever and wherever he wants, he even poops on other people. He is not restrained by conscience or social norms. The title of chapter three in Keller’s book is The Omnipotent, Egocentric Self So back to anger, resentment and gratitude.
When I get up in the morning I often feel grouchy. Often I cannot put my finger on why. It’s just that reality is not the way I want it to be. And I resent that. Six days after Thanksgiving, you see where I’m going. Some people have legitimate reasons for not feeling thankful. Imagine living in Gaza right now.
Howells encourages us to deal with our resentments when we find ourselves having a hard time feeling grateful. “The only way out of pain is through it,” the divorce recovery workshop leaders kept telling us
But here’s a corollary: Those who feel thankful have a hard time feeling angry or resentful. If you knew Officer Nick Kozak before he died two years ago, you knew a guy who seemed to be grateful to simply be alive. He had a job that put him in close contact with the dark side of life, but whenever he would see me, a smile would spread across his face and he’d go out of his way to come over and shake my hand.
People who are thankful have a hard time being angry or resentful.
Another man I miss is Larry Biondi. Larry was born with cerebral palsy and couldn’t walk, so he went through life in his power wheelchair. Nevertheless, he seemed to be thankful, thankful just to be alive. He would even laugh at my dumb jokes.
At the same time, I saw Larry express anger. His job at the Progress Center was Disability Rights Advocate He’d go down to Springfield and fearlessly confront legislators. He could get angry, but he wasn’t an angry person. You see what I mean?
Part of the trick is focus, when you think about it Driving to the Loop from Forest Park, there is plenty of trash along the side of the Eisenhower Expressway, but there is also a majestic skyline.
When I wake up feeling grouchy and if I have my spiritual wits about me, I’ ll hug my wife, put myself in a place where I can hear God tell me for the 10 thousandth time that I am loved. The liturgical word for Communion, by the way, is “eucharist” or “thanksgiving.”
Text my grandchildren, and put “chat with a friend” on my to-do list.
Editor Erika Hobbs
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HOW TO REACH US
ADDRESS 141 S. Oak Park Ave., Oak Park, IL 60302 PHONE 708-366-0600 ■ FAX 708-467-9066
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Years ago, a shopkeeper on Lake Street in Oak Park compared the heavy foot traffic there to the lack of shoppers on Madison Street in Forest Park. He declared, “Forest Park is a myth.” The newspaper immediately sent out a reporter to check on his claim.
When the reporter crossed Harlem Avenue, he felt like he was passing into a different dimension. On the other side, he encountered happy inhabitants, cheerfully going about their daily business. He felt like he had reached a culturally diverse Shangri-La.
The cheerful inhabitants subsisted on ambrosia (bratwurst) and nectar (beer). They lived in modest houses, in complete har mony with their neighbors. As he traveled west across this magical kingdom, the re porter stumbled on the lost continent of Atlantis, complete with water slides and a cooling spray park.
The natives frolicked at this park. It was such a sacred place that they dared not utter its name. When they weren’t playing at “The Park,” the residents had many merry gatherings: Casket Races, German Fest, and the Holiday Walk to name a few.
They decorated their town with scare-
crows, murals, and they wrapped trees with holiday lights. Music was everywhere, with concerts on porches, at the picnic grove and in music venues. Plays were performed under the night sky.
Just west of Atlantis, the reporter scaled Mount Olympus: a monument of giant softball bats orbiting a colossal Clincher None of the gods were physically present, but their photos and batting averages were on prominent display. The reporter pressed even further west.
There it was — Hades! The reporter wandered this vast kingdom of the dead until he finally reached the banks of the River Styx. He searched the shore in vain for Charon to ferry him to the other side. But even the suspension bridge was closed. So his travels took him to 1st Avenue, the far edge of the Underworld.
Retur ning to the world of the living, he sought the leaders of this mystical land. He followed the brick road until he came to Village Hall, ador ned with Greek columns. There he learned the inhabitants pleasantly prospered under the gentle reign of The Five: The Insurance Attor ney, The Safety Director, The Set Designer, The Grant Writer, The Writer, and the other so-called gods of legend, though gods they were!
A LOOK BACK IN TIME
Hollywood comes to Altenheim
Art Carney (left in photo) and Geraldine Fitzgerald were in Forest Park in November 1973 filming at the Altenheim German Old People’s Home. The Oscar-nominated film, Harry and Tonto is about a New York widower who travels with his pet cat, Tonto. Carney would go on to win an Academy Award for his performance. The Altenheim was abuzz with technicians, crew members, personnel and onlookers, making it an exciting few days for residents and staf f.
Photo: Forest Park Re view archiv es, Nov. 21, 1973 Jill Wagner
He found the leaders still operated a commission form of gover nment, an old-fashioned form, more suitable for farm towns. It even had a blinking yellow traffic signal on its main street, typical of rural communities
The peaceful kingdom extended south to a remote island cut off by Roosevelt Road and Harlem Avenue. The reporter came ashore at 16th and Marengo. He found the natives engaged in a primitive rite, known as the “block party.” He saw islanders tossing eggs and water balloons at each other, and consuming great quantities of nectar
Crossing Harlem Avenue back to the real world, he saw the ugly presence of parking meters in shopping districts and orange tickets fluttering on windshields. He saw forbidding high-rises and stores that charged for grocery bags.
This unsightliness he had never encountered in Forest Park. There, he had seen the inhabitants flocking to trade with the simple shopkeepers, with little fear of getting a ticket.
They were attracted to the personal service at homegrown businesses. They enjoyed the home cooking of the restaurants. They savored delicious ice cream and desserts. Even the poorest among them could afford a box of Lemonheads.
The reporter had found that shopkeeper’s words were tr ue: Forest Park was indeed a place of fairy-tale endings.
PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES
PUBLIC NOTICES
PUBLIC NOTICE OF COURT DATE
FOR REQUEST FOR NAME CHANGE
STATE OF ILLINOIS, CIRCUIT COURT COOK COUNTY.
Request of Kalei Elisabeth Guedel Case Number 2024CONC001472
There will be a court date on my Request to change my name from: Kalei Elisabeth Guedel to the new name of: Kalei Sorenson Guedel.
The court date will be held:
On January 10, 2025 at 10:30 a.m. at Zoom ID: 95894921843 Password: 226532, Cook County, in Courtroom # 12.
Published in Wednesday Journal
November 13, 20, and 27, 2024
PUBLIC NOTICE
For any person who was a Special Education Student at Oak Park & River Forest High School and graduated in 2016, 2017, 2018 or 2019, you will have 30 days to contact Susan Graves, at Oak Park & River Forest High School at 708.434.3061 to request your records. On Dec 01, the Special Education student records for 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019 will be destroyed.
Published in Wednesday Journal November 20, 27, 2024
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on age, race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or discrimination.
The Illinois Human Rights Act prohibits discrimination in the sale, rental or advertising of real estate based on factors in addition to those protected under federal law.
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Restrictions or prohibitions of pets do not apply to service animals.
To complain of discrimination, call HUD toll free at: 1-800-669-9777.
GROWING COMMUNITY MEDIA
PUBLIC NOTICE
Attention THE AUTO WAREHOUSE & EVER MARES MORENO,
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on 1/1/25, a sale will be held at 1510 Hannah Ave, Forest Park, IL, 60130 to sell the following articles to enforce a lien existing under the laws of the State of Illinois against such articles for labor, services, skill or material expended upon a storage furnished for such articles at the request of the following designated persons, unless such articles are redeemed within thirty days of the publication of this notice. Our records show, your 2014, TOYOTA, SCION TC with the following VIN
JTKJF5C71E3073577
was towed to our facility per police ordinance. Our records show that the current amount due and owing is $320.00. If payment is not received within 30 days Nobs Towing Inc. will enforce a mechanic’s lien pursuant to Chapter 770 ILCS 50/3.
Published in Forest Park Review Novembr 20, 2024
PUBLIC NOTICE
Attention TOYOTA MOTOR CREDIT CORP & ANTONIO REYES,
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on 1/1/25, a sale will be held at 1510 Hannah Ave, Forest Park, IL, 60130 to sell the following articles to enforce a lien existing under the laws of the State of Illinois against such articles for labor, services, skill or material expended upon a storage furnished for such articles at the request of the following designated persons, unless such articles are redeemed within thirty days of the publication of this notice. Our records show, your 2015, TOYOTA, AVALON with the following VIN 4T1BD1EB2FU046648 was towed to our facility per police ordinance. Our records show that the current amount due and owing is $320.00. If payment is not received within 30 days Nobs Towing Inc. will enforce a mechanic’s lien pursuant to Chapter 770 ILCS 50/3.
Published in Forest Park Review Novembr 20, 2024
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF COOK COUNTY, ILLINOIS COUNTY DEPARTMENT - CHANCERY DIVISION PNC BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION Plaintiff vs. ALFONSO RECENDEZ, UNKNOWN OWNERS AND NON-RECORD CLAIMANTS Defendant 24 CH 1921 CALENDAR 57 NOTICE OF SALE
PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure entered in the above entitled cause Intercounty Judicial Sales Corporation will on December 16, 2024, at the hour 11:00 A.M., Intercounty’s office, 120 West Madison Street, Suite 718A, Chicago, IL 60602, sell to the highest bidder for cash, the following described mortgaged real estate:
Lot 5 in Block 5 in Hillside Manor, a Subdivision of part of the North Half of the North West Quarter of Section 17, Township 39 North, Range 12, East of the Third Principal Meridian, according to the Plat thereof recorded October 5, 1945 as Document Number 1368749, in Cook County, Illinois. P.I.N. 15-17-104-005-0000.
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
Commonly known as 329 High Ridge Road, Hillside, IL 60162.
The real estate is: single family residence. If the subject mortgaged real estate is a unit of a common interest community, the purchaser of the unit other than a mortgagee shall pay the assessments required by subsection (g-1) of Section 18.5 of the Condominium Property Act. Sale terms: At sale, the bidder must have 10% down by certified funds, balance within 24 hours, by certified funds. No refunds. The property will NOT be open for inspection. Prospective bidders are admonished to check the court file to verify all information. For information call Sales Department at Plaintiff’s Attorney, Marinosci Law Group, PC, 2215 Enterprise Drive, Suite 1512, Westchester, Illinois 60154. (312) 940-8580. 1803562
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF COOK COUNTY, ILLINOIS COUNTY DEPARTMENT - CHANCERY DIVISION
BMO BANK N.A. Plaintiff, -v.-
EUGENE A. PELLEGRINI A/K/A EUGENE A. PELLIGRINI, UNKNOWN OWNERS AND NON-RECORD CLAIMANTS, Defendants. 24 CH 2514
1811 BRISTOL ST., WESTCHESTER, IL 60154
NOTICE OF SALE PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a Judgment of foreclosure and Sale entered in the above cause on 9/25/2024, an agent of Auction.com LLC will at 12:00 PM on January 8, 2025 located at 100 N LaSalle St, Suite 1400, Chicago IL, 60602, sell at public sale to the highest bidder, as set forth below, the following described real estate. Commonly known as 1811 BRISTOL ST., WESTCHESTER, IL 60154
Property Index No. 15-21-411-0030000
The real estate is improved with a Single Family Residence. The judgment amount was $102,124.28 Sale
Terms: 20% down of the highest bid by certified funds at the close of the sale payable to Auction.com LLC, No third party checks will be accepted. All registered bidders need to provide a photo ID in order to bid. The balance, in certified funds/or wire transfer, is due within twenty-four (24) hours. (relief fee not required)
The subject property is subject to general real estate taxes, special assessments, or special taxes levied against said real estate and is offered for sale without any representation as to quality or quantity of title and without recourse to plaintiff and in “AS IS” condition. The sale is further subject to confirmation by the court.
Upon payment in full of the amount bid, the purchaser will receive a certificate of sale that will entitle the purchaser to a deed to the real estate after confirmation of the sale. The property will NOT be open for inspection and plaintiff makes no representation as to the condition of
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
the property, prospective bidders are admonished to check the court file to verify all information. If this property is a condominium unit, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale, other than a mortgagee, shall pay the assessments and the legal fees required by the Condominium property Act, 765 ILCS 605/9 (g)(l) and (g) (4). If this property is a condominium unit which is part of a common interest community, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale other than a mortgagee shall pay the assessments required by the Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/18.5(g-1).
IF YOU ARE THE MORTGAGOR (HOMEOWNER), YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO REMAIN IN POSSESSION FOR 30 DAYS AFTER ENTRY OF AN ORDER OF POSSESSION, IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 15-1701 (C) OF THE ILLINOIS MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE LAW. For information, contact Plaintiffs attorney: Law Offices of Ira T. Nevel LLC. (312) 357-1125 please refer to file number 24-00676. Auction.com LLC 100 N LaSalle Suite 1400 Chicago, IL 60606 - 872225-4985 You can also visit www. auction.com.
Attorney File No. 24-00676 Case Number: 24 CH 2514
NOTE: PURSUANT TO THE FAIR DEBT COLLECTION PRACTICES ACT, YOU ARE ADVISED THAT PLAINTIFF’S ATTORNEY IS DEEMED TO BE A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.
I3253810
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF COOK COUNTY, ILLINOIS COUNTY DEPARTMENT - CHANCERY DIVISION
U.S. BANK TRUST NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, NOT IN ITS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY BUT SOLELY AS OWNER TRUSTEE FOR VRMTG ASSET TRUST Plaintiff, -v.-
BENJAMIN MCGEE, MARVA MCGEE A/K/A MARVA D MCGEE, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, UNKNOWN OWNERS AND NON-RECORD CLAIMANTS
Defendants 2023 CH 00549 2918 WILCOX AVENUE BELLWOOD, IL 60104
NOTICE OF SALE
PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV-
EN that pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the above cause on May 1, 2024, an agent for The Judicial Sales Corporation, will at 10:30 AM on January 6, 2025, at The Judicial Sales Corporation, One South Wacker, 1st Floor Suite 35R, Chicago, IL, 60606, sell at a public sale to the highest bidder, as set forth below, the following described real estate:
Commonly known as 2918 WILCOX AVENUE, BELLWOOD, IL 60104 Property Index No. 15-16-206-0550000 The real estate is improved with a single family residence.
Monday at 5 p.m.
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
Sale terms: 25% down of the highest bid by certified funds at the close of the sale payable to The Judicial Sales Corporation. No third party checks will be accepted. The balance, in certified funds/or wire transfer, is due within twenty-four (24) hours. The subject property is subject to general real estate taxes, special assessments, or special taxes levied against said real estate and is offered for sale without any representation as to quality or quantity of title and without recourse to Plaintiff and in “AS IS” condition. The sale is further subject to confirmation by the court.
Upon payment in full of the amount bid, the purchaser will receive a Certificate of Sale that will entitle the purchaser to a deed to the real estate after confirmation of the sale. Where a sale of real estate is made to satisfy a lien prior to that of the United States, the United States shall have one year from the date of sale within which to redeem, except that with respect to a lien arising under the internal revenue laws the period shall be 120 days or the period allowable for redemption under State law, whichever is longer, and in any case in which, under the provisions of section 505 of the Housing Act of 1950, as amended (12 U.S.C. 1701k), and subsection (d) of section 3720 of title 38 of the United States Code, the right to redeem does not arise, there shall be no right of redemption. The property will NOT be open for inspection and plaintiff makes no representation as to the condition of the property. Prospective bidders are admonished to check the court file to verify all information. If this property is a condominium unit, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale, other than a mortgagee, shall pay the assessments and the legal fees required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/9(g)(1) and (g)(4). If this property is a condominium unit which is part of a common interest community, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale other than a mortgagee shall pay the assessments required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/18.5(g-1).
IF YOU ARE THE MORTGAGOR (HOMEOWNER), YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO REMAIN IN POSSESSION FOR 30 DAYS AFTER ENTRY OF AN ORDER OF POSSESSION, IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 15-1701(C) OF THE ILLINOIS MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE LAW. You will need a photo identification issued by a government agency (driver’s license, passport, etc.) in order to gain entry into our building and the foreclosure sale room in Cook County and the same identification for sales held at other county venues where The Judicial Sales Corporation conducts foreclosure sales.
MCCALLA RAYMER LEIBERT PIERCE, LLC Plaintiff’s Attorneys, One North Dearborn Street, Suite 1200, Chicago, IL, 60602. Tel No. (312) 346-9088. THE JUDICIAL SALES CORPORATION One South Wacker Drive, 24th Floor, Chicago, IL 60606-4650 (312) 236SALE
You can also visit The Judicial Sales Corporation at www.tjsc.com for a 7 day status report of pending sales.
MCCALLA RAYMER LEIBERT PIERCE, LLC One North Dearborn Street, Suite 1200 Chicago IL, 60602 312-346-9088
E-Mail: pleadings@mccalla.com
Attorney File No. 22-13437il_864723
Attorney Code. 61256 Case Number: 2023 CH 00549 TJSC#: 44-3002
NOTE: Pursuant to the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, you are advised that Plaintiff’s attorney is deemed to be a debt collector attempting to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. Case # 2023 CH 00549 I3255882
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF COOK COUNTY, ILLINOIS COUNTY DEPARTMENT - CHANCERY DIVISION HSBC BANK USA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR ACE SECURITIES CORP. HOME EQUITY LOAN TRUST, SERIES 2006-OP2 Plaintiff, -v.TAMMY HOLMAN A/KA TAMMY JONES, CAPITAL ONE BANK (USA), N.A., STATE OF ILLINOISDEPARTMENT OF REVENUE
Defendants 2022 CH 10868 1836 S. 3RD AVE. MAYWOOD, IL 60153
NOTICE OF SALE
PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the above cause on October 1, 2024, an agent for The Judicial Sales Corporation, will at 10:30 AM on January 3, 2025, at The Judicial Sales Corporation, One South Wacker, 1st Floor Suite 35R, Chicago, IL, 60606, sell at a public sale to the highest bidder, as set forth below, the following described real estate: Commonly known as 1836 S. 3RD AVE., MAYWOOD, IL 60153 Property Index No. 15-14-305-0270000
The real estate is improved with a residence.
Sale terms: 25% down of the highest bid by certified funds at the close of the sale payable to The Judicial Sales Corporation. No third party checks will be accepted. The balance, in certified funds/or wire transfer, is due within twenty-four (24) hours. The subject property is subject to general real estate taxes, special assessments, or special taxes levied against said real estate and is offered for sale without any representation as to quality or quantity of title and without recourse to Plaintiff and in “AS IS” condition. The sale is further subject to confirmation by the court.
Upon payment in full of the amount bid, the purchaser will receive a Certificate of Sale that will entitle the purchaser to a deed to the real estate after confirmation of the sale. The property will NOT be open for inspection and plaintiff makes no representation as to the condition of
the property. Prospective bidders are admonished to check the court file to verify all information.
If this property is a condominium unit, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale, other than a mortgagee, shall pay the assessments and the legal fees required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/9(g)(1) and (g)(4). If this property is a condominium unit which is part of a common interest community, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale other than a mortgagee shall pay the assessments required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/18.5(g-1).
IF YOU ARE THE MORTGAGOR (HOMEOWNER), YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO REMAIN IN POSSESSION FOR 30 DAYS AFTER ENTRY OF AN ORDER OF POSSESSION, IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 15-1701(C) OF THE ILLINOIS MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE LAW. You will need a photo identification issued by a government agency (driver’s license, passport, etc.) in order to gain entry into our building and the foreclosure sale room in Cook County and the same identification for sales held at other county venues where The Judicial Sales Corporation conducts foreclosure sales. For information, examine the court file, CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C. Plaintiff’s Attorneys, 15W030 NORTH FRONTAGE ROAD, SUITE 100, BURR RIDGE, IL, 60527 (630) 794-9876 THE JUDICIAL SALES CORPORATION One South Wacker Drive, 24th Floor, Chicago, IL 60606-4650 (312) 236SALE
You can also visit The Judicial Sales Corporation at www.tjsc.com for a 7 day status report of pending sales. CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C. 15W030 NORTH FRONTAGE ROAD, SUITE 100 BURR RIDGE IL, 60527 630-794-5300
NOTE: Pursuant to the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, you are advised that Plaintiff’s attorney is deemed to be a debt collector attempting to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. Case # 2022 CH 10868 I3255872
a
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We’re All In
By TONY MARTINEZ, JR. President and CEO, Oak Park-River Forest Community Foundation
In the past six years the Oak ParkRiver Forest Community Foundation has been inspired by the generosity of our residents and neighbors. We see how collectively we can transform and modernize philanthropy. And with courage, the Foundation is pursuing new avenues to do just that — to uphold our promise to be of better service to our partners, and to the greater west side. We’re all in this together. We understand that our work, from grantmaking to our investment portfolio to how we operate overall, must intentionally and comprehensively address the racial disparities that exist in order for all members of our community to thrive and prosper. From Community Voices, our landmark report on community needs for West Cook County, to hiring a new outsourced chief investment o cer
(OCIO) to invest in 100% mission-aligned investments, to our new communityinformed grantmaking strategy focused on safety and belonging and mental health, we are all in. We’re grateful for our capable sta , our committed board of directors, and the organizations,
Together we provide support for our most vulnerable residents.
Better together
As we planned this year’s Season of Giving special project, what struck us was how nonprofits from the West Side and across the Greater West Side of Oak Park, Forest Park, Brookfield are finding ways to collaborate. This has been building ov time for sure. And perhaps it was Covid that intensified the acti building of connections. If y Beyond Hunger, an Oak Pa focused on food insecurity, y want to serve Austin, on the city But rather than focus only on direct services won’t there be a more genuine connection if you partner with existing nonprofits alread at work on the West Side? And that is Beyond Hunger does through its collaborations with A House in Austin and What About Us. Sarah’s Inn focuses on individuals and families caught up in domestic violence. Providing temporary shelter is critical. And its ambitious outreach into local schools which focus on prevention of such violence is vital. But these
, Sarah’s Inn also partners with to provide long-term mental health services to its most traumatized clients. And it works with the Pro Bono Network and Housing ward to offer legal counsel and extended housing services
nda Schueler, executive diHousing Forward, says y has a wide range of “Our partnerships help strengthen the community’s safety net,” she . “One organization alone can’ t take on the mammoth responsibility of addressing riers for vulnerable populars of poverty, racism and e all better as a whole than siloed,” says Schueler
Our thanks, as always, for the par tnership er Forest Community Foundation in this endeavor. And this year our thanks, too, for the sponsorship support of Byline Bank and the West Cook YMCA.
businesses, and civic leaders who share our values and are all in too.
Together we provide support for our most vulnerable residents and continue to address the socio-economic and racial disparities keeping each individual from living a ful lled life. e organizations in the Season of Giving guide need your help to continue to do this important work. We need the engagement and involvement of the whole community in order to reach that goal and move our region forward. We hope you’ll join us.
Local nonprofits and social service understood that they can better meet the comprehensive needs of our community
“We are community. But there is so much we all can’t be experts in Carol Gall, executi Inn, a local organization tic violence. “Collaboration is a nent for ensuring that our all their needs met and are themselves in a life free of violenc Founded in 1980 concerned about tims of domestic violence, Sarah’s Inn last year served almost 30,000 adults, children and teens. The organization provides in tervention programs focusing on changin the behavior of perpetrators, prevention programs for students in local schools, and training and education for professionals Sarah’s Inn is headquartered in Forest Park The Covid pandemic was particularly challenging, as people living in abusive environments were isolated from social networks and under considerable stress. The number of people requesting support skyrocketed and, according to Gall, the need for their services hasn’t decreased in the pandemic’s aftermath as people are now struggling from a lack of af fordable housing, food insecurity and the rising cost of living.
“One organization alone can’t take on the mammoth responsibility of addressing systemic barriers for vulnerable populations, with layers of povert y, racism and inequality.”
LYNDA
SCHUELER Housing Forward’s chief executive o cer
“Pro Bono has attorneys who are committed to understanding how the legal system impacts victims, including child custody, divorce, and orders of protection. They do amazing work,” Gall said.
Sarah’s Inn most intensive current partner is Housing Forward, an organization dedicated to ending homelessness in the west suburbs. Earlier this year, the nonprofits launched Safe Bridge, a program providing housing for individuals and families fleeing domestic violence.
Since its inception in 1992, Housing Forward has grown to be a multi-pronged agency providing wrap-around services, including emergency overnight shelter, interim and permanent supportive housing, emergency financial assistance and street outreach.
Last year, the organization served more
d
partners with Cook County Health on the RISE (Recuperation in a Supportive Environment) Center, a program for homeless individuals needing support after an- inpatient stay in a mental health facility. The center is located inside Write Inn, previously an Oak Park hotel that the organization bought last year and rehabbed for clients needing interim housing Housing Forward is based in Maywood and has many other community partners including Riveredge Hospital in Forest Park, the local chapter of NAMI (National Alliance of Mental Illness) and the Oak Park Homelessness Coalition.
“Our partnerships help strengthen our community’s safety net. We’re always scanning the environment to see who is philosophically aligned with our work. The mutual client has to be at the center of the work,” said Schueler.
Beyond Hunger, an Oak Park-based nonprofit tackling food insecurity, partners with both Housing Forward and Sarah’s Inn as well as other local nonprofits. In addition, it teams up with for-profit entities, including grocery stores
TODD BANNOR
Sarah’s Inn Executive Director Carol Gall speaks at the End Domestic Violence Rally in Scov ille Park on Oct. 1.
Thrive Counseling Center: Carol’s Story
“Ihad always been strong, and able to bounce back. This time, it was too much. I was overwhelmed. I felt paralyzed in my thoughts, even my movement made me feel like a zombie. And I felt so distant from everything and everybody ... so ashamed.
‘How could this be happening to me?’ I had nothing to lose, so with the support of my daughter, I started therapy at Thrive. Listening cautiously, and holding on to each word to analyze, I pushed myself to come and began to connect with my therapist Ryne. Her voice was calm and restful. Ryne listened and began to ask simple questions that dug deeper into me than I expected. She started with what
PING:
Pwas going on right now, with open-ended questions from my past situation, revealing things I had suppressed without knowing for years.
I continued to be consistent and coming. It wasn’t always easy, but definitely necessary…It was so hard to see and hear myself talk about my life. The good, the bad, the ups, the down. Talking about myself out loud. Unbearable at times.
I had to learn to forgive myself, and sometimes daily I forgive myself. I’m learning to be vulnerable in a positive way…I pray that anyone that needs therapy, will seek it. I pray that they will have the support they need to do it, and the strength and courage to participate in it. That is my story” (Name and identifying details have been changed to protect privacy.)
So All Can Participate in Music
ING (Providing instruments for the Next Generation) believes all students should have access to instrumental music in the public schools. But with instrument rentals averaging $50 per month, many would miss out. Instead, PING has been supplying band and orchestra instruments to students at the Oak Park and River Forest public schools for more than 25 years, but that is not all.
“To offer true equity to young musicians, we have mentoring programs and access to lessons, music camps, performances, and trips for PING members,” said executive director Michelle Dybal. The PING Mentoring Program, which is celebrating 20 years, supports middle school musicians. PING Partners supports new musicians in grades 4 and 5. In both programs, PING students are paired with mentors from Oak Park and River Forest High School who play the same instruments.
for PING high school students to take private lessons and for PING musicians in grades 5 through 8 to attend summer music camps to access the same opportunities as their peers.
Additionally, the nonprofit organizes and pays
Instruments remain important to PING’s mission, especially this fall when a record-breaking number of new students became PING members: 84. This increase puts a strain on PING’s instrument inventory, which is aging from increased use. “The inventory is primarily built from generous donations of used instruments received from the community, but there is a need for more, bettergrade and different-sized instruments, along with accessories such as bows and cases,” Dybal said. PING’s largest revenue source is individual donors, and does not receive any monetary assistance from the three school districts it serves, D97, D90, and D200. Donations are needed now more than ever: pingoprf. org/donate. Questions/volunteer/donate an instrument, email: info@pingoprf.org
We envision a world where mental health is valued, proactively nurtured, and in reach of everyone. All are welcome at Thrive. Translation services, including ASL, are available upon request.
Photo: Adam Miller
Changing Women’s Lives at Deborah’s Place
For women like Catelyn, Deborah’s Place represents a fresh start. Having fled domestic violence on the East Coast, she was the victim of a violent crime here in Chicago and suffered an episode of psychosis because of these traumatic experiences. After all this, she found refuge and support in a 120-day transitional program at Deborah’s Place. There, staff helped her get new copies of her important documents and pursue her goal of finding a permanent place to live. Last week, she moved into her own apartment: for the first time in two years, she has a stable place all her own.
With this stable foundation beneath her, she’s excited to continue her career as a pastry chef, and to make her home a welcoming place for her adult children to visit. As Catelyn
moves into this new chapter she’ll continue to have support from Deborah’s Place Alumnae Services. No matter what obstacles may appear, she’s part of a community of care. She says “I’m starting basically fresh, from scratch. I’m going to leave my past in the past and start feeling at peace. I want to be happy— and for a long time, I didn’t think I deserved that.”
Catelyn’s story, like each of ours, is unique in its details—but it’s also one of hundreds at Deborah’s Place, where women’s lives are changing every day. By donating or volunteering, you help accomplish something powerful: once a woman comes to Deborah’s Place, she will never be homeless again. Learn more and support us at deborahsplace.org.
Deborah’s Place • deborahsplace.org • 773-638-6578
Sparking Curiosity, Cultivating Futures
If you’ve ever participated in a docentguided tour of the 95-year-old Oak Park Conservatory, you likely know the feeling you experience afterward. You’ve discovered something new or learned about a unique plant and carry that spark with you which can be shared with others.
Since our founding in 1986, The Friends have offered docent-guided tours of the Oak Park Conservatory. The tours are tailored to each group or grade level and are focused on science and horticulture, climate, and geography. Thousands of preschool through high school students have learned about the difference in rainfall between Mediterranean, tropical, and desert regions.
They have learned about plant defense mechanisms, water retention, and how plants are a source of food for a wide array of creatures. Maybe most importantly, they are curious to understand how they can be stewards of the earth.
This summer, we welcomed a group of Chicago Public Schools students from the After School Matters program for the second year. These kids, ages 14-18, applied for the Horticulture and Botany summer course. Their teacher brought them to the Oak Park Conservatory for a docentguided tour to expand their knowledge of plants
Oak
and climate and to also spark their curiosity about a future in horticulture. The connections our docents make with these kids and all who tour the Conservatory are essential to our vision of cultivating the future.
The Friends have great potential to impact lives in many different ways. From free early childhood programs to adult educational gardening lectures to special events for families, our work is only possible with community support.
We invite you to help expand our efforts to reach residents from surrounding communities with new opportunities and programs. Please help sustain The Friends and the historic Conservatory by supporting us today.
For more information about tours, volunteer opportunities, supporting us financially, or becoming a member, please visit fopcon.org.
COLLABORATIONS
Better together from page 4
and restaurants, to collect food products that otherwise would be thrown away.
What started in 1979 as a holiday food basket program org anized by a local Girl Scout troop is now an organization providing a community pantry, home deliveries, cooking classes, and health education programs for more than 65,000 people in the west suburbs and the city’s West Side.
Beyond Hunger operates a community food pantry in the basement of First United Church of Oak Park. During the pandemic, the organization had to switch gears and distributed packaged boxes of food on a drive-through basis in the church’s parking lot of f of Lake Street.
“We found that our clients really enjoyed the convenience, efficiency and anonymity of the drive-through, so we have continued it,” said Michele Zurakowski, chief executive officer of Beyond Hunger.
The org anization has a robust food deliv-
ery program and operates an innovative summer meals program for students in Districts 200 and 97. To avoid any stigma, food is provided to all students, and the
Having a home means everything to me
When Jackie’s relationship became abusive, she knew that she needed to get herself and her three children to safety. Following her stay at a domestic violence shelter, she was connected with an advocate at Sarah’s Inn, who helped identify her immediate needs and supported her as she began her healing journey toward a stable and independent life that is free from domestic violence. rough the Safe Bridge Housing Project, a collaboration between two well-established organizations, Sarah’s Inn and Housing Forward, Jackie was able to nd housing within a community where she and her children feel safe. e
Safe Bridge Housing Project provides survivors and their families with case management and wrap-around support services and resources.
anks to the Safe Bridge Housing Project, Jackie is now raising her children in a neighborhood where they feel safe, with good schools, and where her children are making friends. She is excited about their future and is extremely thankful to e Safe Bridge Housing Project which has a orded her the ability to provide a safe and loving home for her children.
Visit sarahsinn.org to hear more about Jackie’s story and to learn more about Sarah’s Inn’s programs and services.
schools are reimbursed by the federal government for those students eligible for the free lunch program.
Through Rush Oak Park Hospital medi-
cal staf f, Beyond Hunger clients receive blood pressure and cardiac screenings and access to free medical care at the hospital if needed. Volunteers with its Surplus Project collect surplus food re packaged by Rush cafeteria staf f into individual microwavable containers that are refrigerated until being delivered to sites throughout the community.
“We are increasingly focused on reaching people where they are rather than making them come to our home site at First United, which is really constrained for space,” said Zurakowski.
To that end, the organization partners with Austin-based nonprofits A House in Austin and What About Us through its Health Ambassadors project. Beyond Hunger provides nutrition training to the nonprofits’ own constituents who then share what they’ve learned with other constituents on-site.
Par tnerships, which appear to be a win/ win for all involved—for the organizations, their clients and even their donors—allow our local nonprofits to remain focused on their core constituencies while connecting their constituents with a wider range of essential services than they can offer alone.
CREDIT PHOTOSFORFOOD
Michele Zurakowski CEO of Beyond Hunger and chef Rafat Alzein, during Beyond Hunger’s 4th annual Healthy Chef Challenge on May 30.
Across Austin Blvd., nonpro ts nd ways to share services, grow connections
Building trust where there has been skepticism is foundational
By ZOË TAKAKI Contributing Reporter
Nonprofits which work across the border between Oak Park and Austin face unique challenges and growing opportunities. After decades in which Austin Boulevard has served as a hard boundary between neighborhoods which were once united, progress is clear if sometimes halting. There are now several nonprofits with physical presences in both communities and a changing awareness of how more affluent and majority white Oak Park can help best by listening more to Austinites.
Three nonprofits -- New Moms, Beyond Hunger and The Neighborhood Bridge – are among agencies working in both Oak Park
and Austin to serve the two communities in the ways they need to be served.
Prentice Butler, recently named executive director of still new Neighborhood Bridge, recognizes this when discussing how the nonprofit started with volunteers from Oak Park’s four Catholic parishes and has str ived to work with the Austin community
“There’s been, unfortunately, boundaries between the community for years, and it’s been exacerbated by this disinvestment,” said Butler. “Many times before where you have a well-resourced community wanting to help out a community in need, there can be, let’s be quite frank, a black and white divide between the two communities. But through the efforts of doing the outreach and having conversations with lots of leaders in the community, I think there is a healthy optimism now where there might have been a healthy kind of skepticism.”
Butler has seen the positive impact of working with both communities.
“I think it’s a positive experience bridging the gap,” said Butler. “What we had in
New Moms’ job training program gives young mothers the chance to build their skills at Bright Endeavors, the nonpro t’s social enterprise that produces soy candles.100% of the proceeds bene t the mission of empowering young moms, their kids, and the local communities.
mind is to bring people together and make sure it’s done in a respectful and equitable way. This is not a top-down approach, this is collaborative. It’s been great to get people from both sides of the line of the community to be able to articulate for themselves what they would like to see.”
When serving both communities, nonprofts often recognize that the two communities have both different and shared needs.
An example of this comes from the nonprofit Beyond Hunger, which has roots in Oak Park for 45 years, and now has expanded to serving a variety of zip codes, including Austin.
Corina Robinson, communications manager at Beyond Hunger said the nonprofit calulated a food insecurity score that showed that Austin residents have about double the level of food insecurity as counterparts in Oak Park
“That encouraged us to start a second produce delivery. We began partnering with
local farmers and local growers in the area, especially within the Austin community and we were able to start doing a second delivery that’s dedicated just to produce for all of our home delivery clients,” said Robinson.
Jenna Hammond, chief development officer of the nonprofit New Moms, recognizes this when discussing the use of services across the two communities.
“There are maybe more services in Oak Park, but there’s also fewer people in need of those services. So then the ratio there works maybe in the favor of somebody in need, whereas in Austin, we’re part of a city that has resources, but there’s so many in need of them, creating a different strain on being able to access those resources,” said Hammond.
In response, these nonprofits put more investment where needed and actively respond to the needs of those asking for their services.
ANJALI PINTO
TODD BANNOR
John Meister, Kenna MacKinnon, Debbie Holiday-Phillips and Dan Doody of Neighborhood Bridge a er a presentation to service providers at Build Chicago on Jan. 9, 2023.
Juan Silva (center) of the Brook eld Rotary Club and John Dumas (center right), administrative director of Share Food Share Love, stand with others to cut the ribbon on Brook eld’s rst communit y refrigerator.
Rotary Club, food pantry unveil Brook eld’s rst community fridge
Share Food Share Love will host the fridge at its food pantry for anyone who cannot a ord perishables
By TRENT BROWN Staff Reporter
The Rotary Club of Brookfield Riverside and Share Food Share Love food pantry have come together to help anyone in need of perishable food items.
On Friday, Sept. 13, both groups hosted a ribbon cutting for Brookfield’s first community refrigerator. From 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. every day, anyone will be able to access the fridge at the Share Food Share Love food pantry, located at 9030 Brookfield Ave.
While the pantry is providing the space, members of the Rotary Club will be responsible for maintaining the fridge. Friday morning ahead of its first day being open to
the public, Rotary members stocked it full of eggs, dairy products and fresh produce, as well as frozen goods in the freezer.
Juan Silva, a Rotary Club member and co-owner of Brookfield’s Beach Avenue BBQ, told the Landmark his idea for a community refrigerator was inspired by his past work
“Before I started Beach Avenue BBQ, I used to be a social worker in Little Village and other low-income neighborhoods, and the Love Fridge was a thing that existed in those communities,” he said. “I wanted to bring that to Brookfield because I knew that there was a need.”
The Love Fridge is a mutual aid group
Sponsored Content
With Beyond Hunger’s help, Alma’s table is full this season
At Beyond Hunger, our mission centers the significant role our community plays in ending hunger. More than providing healthy and nutritious groceries, we strive to build relationships with everyone who engages with us. These connections are what keep Beyond Hunger a strong, steadfast pillar of warmth and familiarity that many can rely on.
One of the most impactful ways we complete this mission is by writing holiday cards to our Home Delivery clients, who are homebound seniors and older adults, expressing our gratitude for them. One client, Alma, was so grateful that she wrote back: “As Thanksgiving approaches, I am mindful
of the many blessings I have and that includes all of you and the care that you show me. I am so thankful for your kindness. I am grateful that you are providing me with necessary food items yearround that deliciously sustain me, especially during the holidays.”
This work is only possible with your generosity. Alma’s note is a testament that your contribution, no matter how big or small, can make a meaningful difference in the lives of those experiencing food insecurity.
Together, we can put a meal on every family’s table not just this holiday season, but all year round. Together, we can end hunger. Donate today and learn more at www.gobeyondhunger.org.
Beyond Hunger • gobeyondhunger.org
PHOTO BY BOB UPHUES
MEMBERSHIP FOR ALL
KICK OFF THE HOLIDAY SEASON
Kick off the holiday season by exploring all the ways you can participate in programs at the West Cook YMCA that fit your needs and your schedule::
• In-Person at the Y
• Live-streaming at the Y
• Live-streaming on YMCA360
• On-demand on YMCA360
TAKE A TOUR TODAY.
Stop in for a tour and we will show you all that the Y has to offer to meet your needs. Tour guides are available by reservation.
JOIN ONLINE
Receive $0 Joiner Fee and 50% off first month when you join online.
LEARN MORE
PROGRAMS FOR ALL
AQUATICS
Swimming is a life skill as well as great exercise and a challenging sport. All year, the Y offers drowning prevention and swim lessons for all ages, a swim team for the more competitive swimmer, and lifeguard and additional certification courses for those who want to lead the community in being safe.
LEARN MORE
PERSONAL TRAINING
Whether you need a check-up here and there or regular motivation and structure, our personal trainers are here to help you. Each package contains an initial Fitness Consultation to determine your goals and what each session will include. Sessions are 30 or 60 minutes in length.
LEARN MORE
CHRONIC DISEASE RISK MANAGEMENT
Providing evidence-based programs that prevent and manage chronic diseases. We offer programs throughout the year to address arthritis support, cancer wellness, childhood weight management, diabetes prevention, hypertension management, and weight loss.
LEARN MORE
GIVE THE GIFT OF HEALTH SUPPORTING OUR NEIGHBORS
This holiday season, join West Cook YMCA in providing programs and services that address the needs of our community. With your support, the Y serves as a refuge for those who are housing vulnerable, prevents drowning through complimentary swim lessons, helps our community reduce and mitigate the risk factors for chronic diseases, and collaborates with our school districts to strengthen the academic and social emotional supports of our students.
When you support the West Cook YMCA, you give the gift of wellbeing to our neighbors and have a transformational impact on our community today and tomorrow.
100% of your tax-deductible donation goes directly to provide free or reduced membership and access to the Y’s various programs and services to include drowning prevention, swim lessons, reduce the risk of chronic disease, enrichment for youth, and improving the health and wellness for the families and communities we serve.
We have set an ambitious goal that 30% of our membership will have access to the YMCA through contributions such as yours.
EXAMPLES OF HOW YOUR DONATION
GIVES THE GIFT OF WELLBEING:
$25 | ACCESS TO THE Y AS A MEMBER
$50 | PREVENT DROWNING
$100 | SUPPORT STUDENTS
$250 | REDUCE RISK OF CHRONIC DISEASES
GIVE TODAY IN-PERSON OR MAIL: West Cook YMCA
255 S. Marion St. Oak Park, IL 60302
ONLINE: westcookymca.org/give
BUILD report shows 13% decrease in violence around Austin campus
The gures come from the violence prevention organization’s annual repor t
By JESSICA MORDACQ Staff Reporter
While there was a 9% increase in violence in Austin in 2023, the half mile surrounding the Austin campus of BUILD — or Broader Urban Involvement & Leadership Development, a gang intervention, violence prevention and youth development organization — experienced a 13% decrease, according to the Chicago Data Portal.
The data is a part of BUILD’s recently released annual re port, summarizing the organization’s ef for ts and effects from June 2023 to June 2024.
Since 1969, BUILD has worked to connect young people with each other and support them to overcome barriers and thrive in their communities. BUILD case workers and mentors connect with youth on the West Side in the street, through afterschool programs, and from June 2023 to 2024, in a record 20 schools.
Funded by individual contributions, plus foundation and government grants, BUILD offers support services for mental health, crises and violence intervention, plus programs for colle ge and career pathways, and workforce development. The organization has also hosted over 100 community events or pop-ups to eng age the community and inter rupt violence.
“I was in a deep hole when I first came to BUILD. They took me out of that deep hole,” said Liliana, a 16-year-old quoted in the re port. She said BUILD encouraged her to participate in its programs. “I used to be crazy, just a straight hothead. Now, I just go to school, go home and to BUILD. It’s all I do now, and I’m happy.”
In its 2024 fiscal year, BUILD re ported it touched the lives of more than 2,750 young people, and its community events reached more than 7,500 locals — over 3,000 more than either of the previous two years.
Of those whom BUILD served, 99% have witnessed violence, 63% in the past year. 83% said they have friends or family in gangs, with 7% involved themselves. And nearly half were bullied, with another 40% recently suspended or disciplined at school. But since participating with BUILD from the summer of 2023 to 2024, 65% of those who were involved with gangs detached from them or are in the process of doing so. Another 85% had no detentions or expulsions during that time, and 82% had fewer disciplinary infractions.
From the 2023 to 2024 financial year, BUILD saw 6,405 more individual therapy sessions, 2,821 more group ones, and a 260-person increase in the number of
youths in therapeutic care.
The annual BUILD re port tells the story of D, a 16-year-old, who the organization suggested go to therap y.
“Of course there were bumps in the road – he struggled, he really put his mom through the wringer,” BUILD officials said. Now, D has a stipend job at BUILD. “His mom says his behavior has improved. He comes to work every day like he’s supposed to. He’s not disruptive at home. He’s not disruptive at school. So, it takes time, but BUILD works.”
BUILD’s increase in the number of people it has reached is largely due to the organization’s expansion.
While BUILD still operates a commu-
nity site inside the Cook County Juvenile Temporary Detention Center, it opened its Youth and Community Hub last year in Austin, and this was its first full year on the campus.
In the summer, the Austin Campus was open until 9 p.m. nightly and until midnight three nights a week — sometimes for a late basketball night or for outdoor movies. Last month, the Austin campus held its first Halloween Spooky Farm
“BUILD Austin feels like a space for everyone, and having grown up just 10 minutes from here, I didn’t feel that I had that,” a BUILD neighbor said in the re port. “It makes me feel hopeful to see what’s being built by community.”
FRANCIA GARCIA HERNANDE Z
Chicago ar tist Dwight White with middle-school participants from BUILD’s art program at the mural unveiling last October
COMMUNIT Y BRIDGE
from page 9
that operates and maintains 22 community fridges in areas around Chicago.
While Rotary Club members fully stocked the fridge Friday, Silva said it will mostly run based off donations from Brookfield residents or any other charitable people. People who wish to donate unexpired food can access the fridge at the same time it’s open to those in need
Silva said he had approached the Rotary Club with his idea for the fridge three years ago. They were able to raise funds for the initiative but quickly hit roadblocks in the form of village code compliance.
“Our idea was just to put it outside somewhere where people can access it, but we realized that there’s a lot more behind the scenes that goes into it,” he said. “Finally, we brought the idea to John from Share Food Share Love, and he agreed to host the refrigerator.”
John Dumas, the food pantry’s administrative director, said his team was in favor of the initiative immediately.
“Everybody was on board right away, because this really does fill a gap for us. There’s nothing more heartbreaking than [when] we get a call on Wednesday morning after we’ve been open on Tuesday, and somebody says, ‘I’m desperate for food,’ and we say, ‘Come Saturday,’” when the food pantry is open next, he said. “This is great for us because [we can say],
‘Hey, come by, grab something out of the fridge and then come back on Saturday and get your full complement of food.’”
Dumas said the pantry originally thought to keep the fridge accessible at all times, but Brookfield police advised against it for security reasons, so they agreed on the 16-hour daily window instead. He said Share Food Share Love also upgraded its door alarms, installed cameras and fixed it so the door locks itself at 10 p.m. each night.
Aside from that, though, he said there were few barriers to getting the fridge up and running once Share Food Share Love was involved.
“The Rotary, obviously, played a huge part in it, and the village was very supportive. The Chamber [of Commerce] was very supportive. Everybody that we’ve approached about it has just thought it was a great thing,” he said. “We actually ended up having an extra refrigerator, so it was just a question of pushing it out into the lobby.”
Dumas and Silva both said they hope Brookfield will embrace the community refrigerator
“I would encourage the community not only to use [the fridge] if they need food but also to bring food,” Dumas said. “The pantry will be doing some stocking, but we’re really counting on the community to keep it filled.”
“There’s a food pantry over by Eight Corners, and [people in need] have [Share Food Share Love], but there’s nowhere for them to get perishables, such as eggs, dairy, things like that, maybe some fresher produce that we can keep in the refrigerator,” Silva said. “We’re just hoping to give them [some] more options other than the boxed and canned items.”
Bridging the Gap to Help Austin Residents Thrive
Alicia and her daughter had been sleeping on friends’ sofas for months. Most recently, they’d been staying at Alicia’s mother’s house when her mother gave them a deadline to leave. That’s when Alicia turned to her child’s school for help, who referred her to The Neighborhood Bridge. The Neighborhood Bridge contacted several human service providers to help her find a place to live. Today they have a place to call their own.
The Neighborhood Bridge was established in 2023 to help connect Austin families to existing, highperforming human services. We conducted surveys and held focus groups with more than 600 parents and guardians of school-age children in Austin to understand their needs. There was consensus that while there are many
service providers in the Austin area, families and schools don’t know who to contact or struggle to overcome barriers such as trust, bureaucracy, paperwork, and transportation.
That’s where The Neighborhood Bridge comes in. We have built connections to over 40 service providers in Austin. In January, we will begin training our first group of volunteer Advocates. These Advocates will be assigned to families to help connect them to the services they need to thrive. And when families thrive, a whole community thrives. Help us “bridge the gap” for the services Austin families need and deserve. For information about volunteering with The Neighborhood Bridge, contact Jeanne Gallo at jeanne.gallo@theneighborhoodbridge.org. To donate, go to theneighborhoodbridge.org.
ACROSS AUSTIN
from page 8
While there are some struggles when working between Oak Park and Austin, there are many benefits as well.
“Oak Park and Austin have significant community engagement around supporting and addressing issues in their communities. It looks different because the communities are made up of different groups, but they both have people who care very much about the wellbeing of their communities,” said Hammond.
There is also a greater continuum of services when working across a variety of zip codes.
“If a young mom we work with begins at our location in Oak Park and then moves into the city and still needs services, she could come to our Chicago site and access those same services,” said Hammond.
The Neighborhood Bridge has been having volunteers from both Austin and Oak Park work with them, which creates an opportunity for those across the communities to get to know one another.
“For a lot of people, in Oak Park, they have expressed desire to help and to lift up those that have been left behind traditionally in the community, and there’s been a desire in others in the Austin community to make sure that there’s open dialog, and their shared ef fort to make sure Austin is a strong community,” said Butler.
ACT connects and inspires
Austin Coming Together (ACT)’s Austin Community Hub connects Austin residents to resources. At the 5th annual graduation party they hosted alongside the 600 N. Lorel Block Club, local youth were celebrating when Marshall Douthard Jr. shared his passion for architecture and construction.
“[At the graduation,] I thought we were just going to get a round of applause for graduating high school - Mr. Shields did more than that. He recognized us and gifted us with tokens of appreciation for our accomplishments. This motivated me to keep going. I really did not expect it,” Marshall said.
Innovation to get insight into what a project like this entails from both a construction and a community perspective. At the tour, Marshall met different staff, sat in on meetings, and learned what it might be like to have a job in the industry. It is this type of exposure and support that we continue to advocate for because we know how it can inspire our youth!
Marshall recently graduated from the Howe School of Excellence and this experience helped him decide to major in construction management at Illinois State University to graduate with an Associate in General Studies and a Certificate in Construction.
But ACT’s Executive Director Darnell Shields did not stop there, offering the young man a chance to tour the Aspire Center for Workforce
When asked if he had any advice for other youth, he said “If you want to be successful, don’t be afraid to put yourself out there!”
Candace’s Voice and Strength: Embracing Community, the Warrior Way
Opportunity Knocks is comprised of Warriors who utilize voice, interdependence, experience, wellness, and social aspects of their lives to face the challenge of living with intellectual and developmental differences. By focusing on these aspects of their lives, warriors are able to thrive and influence their communities.
One Warrior who has particularly flourished by focusing on these aspects of her life is Candace T. Candace is a newer Warrior who brings a fresh perspective and a smile to every situation. While Candace is not from this area and her family is not near, she has embraced creating a community of her own, which includes her OK Warrior family. Candace is also involved in Arts of Life where she continues to seize every opportunity to show her talents and build up her community.
Candace’s positivity is contagious and she has positively impacted other Warriors in her short time being involved in programs. Candace brings a fresh perspective and experiences to OK. Candace has committed herself to utilizing her voice positively to help her friends when they’re having hard times. She also continues to grow in her love of art and has been an amazing artistic influence at Opportunity Knocks, bringing her voice to the community.
At Opportunity Knocks, we envision an inclusive community where all individuals experience access, presence, and support. Your support will help us continue to build that community. We are grateful for your support in keeping the Warrior Mission moving forward. Please consider a contribution.
The Oak Park Regional Housing Center Continues To Help Residents Expand Their Housing Options
Housing is an extraordinary need but also basic human right. Due to unforeseen circumstances, Mr. McKee had to abruptly uproot from his previous residence to find new rental housing. After spending half his life in Oak Park, Mr. McKee had a need and a desire to remain in this community where his roots had been planted. Mr. McKee had used the Housing Center for services in the past. He was excited to learn that the services offered by the Oak Park Regional Housing Center were still available. He recalled the helpfulness of the Housing Center staff and the willingness to ensure that he
would receive the assistance needed to secure housing in the community he loves.
Mr. McKee was seeking a new rental residence that would welcome him and his dog Duke. Gretchen, the Housing Center Residential Coordinator, worked with Mr. McKee to help him find a location that was suitable for him and his dog Duke. Gretchen soon found a studio apartment that would accommodate Mr. Mckee with his budget and his furry friend. Mr. McKee has stated that this process put his mind at ease about what his next housing opportunity would be. Mr. McKee has stated he would and continues to recommend the services of the Oak Park Regional Housing Center.
Main Office: 1041 South Boulevard • Oak Park, IL 60302
708-848-7150 • info@oprhc.org
Meet Deborah Williams, Associate Director - HUD programming, of the Oak Park Regional Housing Center. Deborah has more than 10 years of experience assisting and educating individuals to become homeowners, manage their finances and to sustain their homeownership. Deborah makes a “statement” as she provides services to each of the clients that participate in the Oak Park Regional Housing Center’s West Cook Homeownership program. Her most recent impact was the assistance she provided to client Allie. Allie is a housing choice voucher holder who is seeking to become a homeowner. Allie has always wanted to become a homeowner. However, she never received the support she felt she
needed when she would talk to other agencies. When she met Deborah she felt she had found someone who would help her with every step of the way. Despite needing assistance with the basics of technology, Deborah helped her. When she needed to understand terms, Deborah took the time she needed to provide Allie with the information to assist her.
“I didn’t feel like I was being rushed or burdened, which is not what a lot of people exercise nowadays. It was very refreshing getting to know her and knowing that I will be working with her to hopefully become a homeowner soon. I feel better equipped and more adequate when I talk to her. She is an asset to your company.”
- Allie, 2024 pre-purchase homeownership client
Deborah Williams
Ending Hunger
A word about hunger in our region...
When we founded the Share Food Share Love food pantry, we referred to the people we served as our “clients”. Many helping professions use this term. But defense lawyers and psychologists also use the term. And we felt that in our situation, this can reinforce an unwanted stigma and relationship. A relationship that runs contrary to our pantry’s most guiding core value: Upli ing the dignity of people.
Let’s say you are a volunteer at our food pantry and it’s your role to welcome visitors through the pantry. So, you go into the pantry’s waiting room and call out the next service number. And among the several dozen people sitting before you, one raises her hand. And you suddenly realize that the person
raising her hand is your next-door neighbor. What must her experience feel like? What do you want her experience to feel like?
ese were the kind of questions we started to ask ourselves. And we soon stopped using the word “client”. Because the people who come to us for help are not our clients. ey are our neighbors.
We’re all neighbors here. Our food pantry’s long-term goal is to alleviate the causes of hunger in our 15-village region. is requires that we bring neighbors together. Including those in need, volunteers, donors, and strategic partners. Because in a word, the rst step toward ending our community-rooted problem is by recognizing that we are all neighbors in the e ort.
Share Food Share Love • 630-347-5390 • sharefoodsharelove.org
Wonder Works Children’s Museum Strives to Serve ALL Children
Wonder Works Executive Director Rachel Weber says, “Wonder Works Children’s Museum stands out because of its size. We are small and mighty and we seek to serve ALL children, regardless of financial difficulties or sensory needs.”
In 2024, Wonder Works Children’s Museum doubled their number of sensory friendly play sessions. Twice a month on Sunday, the museum opens an hour early for an accessible and inclusive environment and partners with Kids Unlimited Therapy Services and Lifespeed Behavioral Support Services. To best prepare the environment for a sensory friendly experience, each Wonder Works for Everyone session offers pre-registration for a limited number of families. Through the Museums for All program, Wonder Works Children’s Museum offers $3 admission to anyone with a LINK/EBT card. Regular museum admission is $15 per person and $13 for seniors, first responders, educators, and military personnel.
Wonder Works Children’s Museum works with several local social service organizations, including Friends of the Children, a House in Austin, and Family Focus, to offer free admission to agency clients. Organizations partnering with Wonder Works can rent the museum at no cost to host private events for their families. The museum also hosts regular community partner nights to bring all the social service agency clients together to play and learn about other services available in the community.
Wonder Works Children’s Museum is a 501c3 non-profit organization and depends on donations to make museum admissions possible for ALL children. Make a gift to Wonder Works today at www.wonder-works. org/give .
6445 W. North Ave. • Oak Park, IL 60302 • (708) 383-4815
Families affiliated with social service
DeAvioun nds hope with the support of New Moms
De’Avioun felt completely alone. She was in the nal months of her rst pregnancy with little support from her family. She questioned the quality of life she could provide for her child and considered putting her baby up for adoption. How could she do this all alone? One day, in a nal e ort to nd support, she searched the internet and discovered New Moms.
When she learned how New Moms’ programs supported young moms just like her, she courageously walked through the front door of New Moms, where she was warmly met by our Family Support Manager, Courtney. is step changed everything.
she could be a wonderful mom to her baby.
De’Avioun sees a bright future for her and her daughter. Encouraged by New Moms sta , she has enrolled at Triton College to pursue an Associate’s degree in architecture and plans to graduate in 2026. De’Avioun’s personal experience with housing insecurity fuels her aspirations to design residential homes.
A single glimmer of hope can transform a person’s journey from shadows to light. Today De’Avioun is leaning on the supportive community of New Moms while she discovers and achieves her goals.
For De’Avioun, New Moms’ programs became a lifeline. She enrolled in New Moms’ doula services two weeks before welcoming her baby girl into the world. With this new supportive community around her, she saw a future where
“New Moms has helped me gain more selfawareness and given me the con dence to be a mom, because I didn’t have it before.”
New Moms | 773.252.3253 | www.newmoms.org
Holiday Food and Gift Basket Brings Joy to Hundreds of Families
Holiday Food and Gi Basket, a program of the Community of Congregations, has been a beloved tradition in Oak Park and River Forest since the 1970’s. Every year we provide grocery gi cards in November and holiday gi s in December to families that have been referred to us by schools, township o ces, and social service agencies.
is year, 780 families ranging in size from individuals to families of twelve have been referred to us. Each individual or family will receive a Jewel-Osco gi card that varies from $35 to $80 depending on family size. We hope that these gi cards will help o set anksgiving grocery expenses and provide a more enjoyable holiday.
gi s, and deliver them to us at United Lutheran Church the week of December 9. en on Saturday, December 14, volunteers will load up their cars with the wrapped gi s and spread holiday joy throughout our community.
As one past recipient said, “You brought Christmas joy that warmed my heart in a truly special way. is is the rst year in several that I am actually looking forward to Christmas and I need to give you 100% of the credit.”
We also match families with sponsors who shop for gi s o a provided wish list, wrap the
Our small program has a big impact because of the support of community members like you. For information on how you can be a donor, sponsor, or volunteer, please visit our website at www.communityofcongregations. org/holiday-food-gi -basket/. ank you for helping our neighbors in need.
New Moms exists so young moms do not have to parent alone. Our impact is multi-generational, exponential, and beautiful.
Young moms and children need stability to take the next steps forward.
New Moms ensures that young moms have what they need to thrive.
Economic mobility is key to lasting change.
Being
Byline Bank fosters growth and unity in local communities
As a nancial institution, Byline Bank is well-versed in the art of investing. But as a community bank, Byline understands that its role extends beyond just accepting investments; it also actively invests back into its community.
In the last two years, Byline Bank gave over $160,000 in sponsorships, donations and grants and over $2.7 million in community development loans. In addition, Byline employees volunteered over 550 hours with Oak Park and River Forest organizations.
“Our involvement in the community is organically driven,” said Susie Goldschmidt, Byline’s Oak Park and River Forest Market President. “We’re here; we get to know local organizations who are on the ground and problem-solving, and we get to know local people who ask us to get engaged—we try to answer those calls.”
In answering the call, Byline has helped advance a number of Oak Park and River Forest initiatives including those related to animal welfare; the arts; diversity, equity and inclusion; education; nancial literacy; food
security; mental health; and family support. Some highlights include the following: e arts. Byline sponsors Music & Potlucks, the Oak Park Festival eatre, the Oak Park Art League, the Symphony of Oak Park & River Forest, Heritage Chorale, the Michael Teolis Singers, and One Voice for Arts. ese sponsorships enhance access to locally driven entertainment and provide the community with an opportunity to come together and unite behind its shared love of the arts.
Diversity, equity and inclusion. Byline supports organizations such as the Oak Park Area Lesbian & Gay Association, Oak Leyden, Place to Belong, rive Counseling Center, AgeOptions, the Chinatown Chamber of Commerce Dragon Boat Race for Literacy, and the West Suburban Special Recreation Association. ese e orts contribute to fostering a more inclusive and equitable community—a place where success is attainable for all.
Food security. Byline Bank is deeply committed to Beyond Hunger, a charitable
organization dedicated to combating hunger through various programs and services. Byline provides essential community development grants for operational needs and sponsors the nonpro t’s annual fall bene t concerts. Goldschmidt also sits on the Beyond Hunger Board of Directors.
Byline’s community involvement is not limited to traditional philanthropy within nonpro ts. “We of course give where there’s a pressing need,” Goldschmidt said, “but we nd it’s meaningful to invest in the economic ecosystem and the community as a whole.” For example, during lunch meetings at its Oak Park and River Forest branches, Byline arranges for catering from nearby eateries—a small yet meaningful way of supporting the local economy, Goldschmidt notes.
Consistent with its status as the top Small Business Administration lender in Illinois, Byline advocates for local businesses as a member of the Oak Park-River Forest Chamber of Commerce and a sponsor of
Takeout 25. Goldschmidt also serves as president of Downtown Oak Park Business Alliance and as a member of the Village of Oak Park Business Association Council and Imagine Foundation Advisory Council. In addition, Byline has a presence at most Oak Park and River Forest community events, including the Memorial Day parade, Oaktoberfest, ursday Night Out and OPRF Rotary Food Truck Rally.
“We want Oak Park and River Forest to thrive,” Goldschmidt said. “Wellfunctioning charities, well-supported businesses and a tight-knit community equates to more opportunities for our customers, their families and our employees who live and work here. We’re giving back and pitching in because it’s what neighbors do.”
Animal Care League Development and Marketing Workplace Room
League of Women Voters Oak Park River Forest Gala celebrating 100 years
Give a gift that every child will remember forever—the gift of a happy childhood. From now through December 31st, when you give a gift online, it will be matched by generous donors during our Hephzibah Holiday Challenge.
The Joyful Giving Catalog2024
Animal Care League
Animal Care League o ers a safe haven for pets in need. Rooted in the community since 1973, Animal Care League takes a proactive approach to animal care and adoption as well as preventative measures to help reduce the number of homeless animals in our communities. With over 1,300 pets coming to our doors each year, Animal Care League counts on supporters to ensure that we can provide what is needed from routine vaccinations to life saving surgery. Make a di erence in the life of a homeless animal by visiting animalcareleague.org where you can sign up to volunteer, make a donation, view our adoptable pets, and learn about upcoming events.
Arts Alliance Forest Park
Become a Member and Create With Us! Arts Alliance Forest Park. The Catalyst for Creativity.
Members enjoy a variety of bene ts including discounts to events, advanced notice to opportunities to showcase your talent, all while collaborating with other local organizations and businesses including Forest Park Theatre, the Park District, Historical Society and the Forest Park Chamber of Commerce.
Programs include the well-attended and known StoopSessions, Tellers’ Night, GarageGalleries, Makers’ Market and FiberFlash. You were born creative. Join the only Forest Park arts organization that assembles like-minded art enthusiasts for the love, fun and beauty of art.
Austin Coming Together (ACT)’s mission is to increase the collective impact of our 50+ member organizations on improving education and economic development outcomes for Chicago’s Austin community. Since 2010, we’ve been connecting residents to services, attracting investments for the community, and building capacity for policy change. Recent e orts include co-developing the former Emmet School into the Aspire Center for Workforce Innovation and supporting the Austin Eats Initiative, a 20+ group focused on strengthening the community’s food access infrastructure.
Learn how Austin is leading e orts to move forward together, and how you can support, at AustinComingTogether.org/AustinCares
Beyond Hunger
For 45 years
Beyond Hunger has been harnessing the power of communities to create a hun-
ger-free future. Our food pantry, home delivery program, nutrition education classes, and bene ts services program provides hunger relief that goes beyond basic nourishment. Our goal is to provide our clients with the immediate and long-term tools they need, ensuring that no one is left behind in the battle against food insecurity. This work is not possible without our community. Whether you volunteer, advocate for those in need, or donate, you are essential in moving our mission forward. With your support, we believe hunger is solvable.
BUILD
Since 1969, we have embedded mentors in schools and across neighborhoods to connect with youth who need support. Wrapping young people in the opportunities and care they deserve, we help them build hope, resilience, and a path to a promising future. We engage youth at every stage, with specialized teams dedicated to street violence interventions, gang detachments, creative after-school programming, academic school, college support, mental health care, community violence crisis response, and enrichment activities ranging from art and music to sports, podcasting, engineering, and gardening. Potential doesn’t discriminate, neither should opportunity.
Join us in BUILDing a better future: www.buildchicago.org
CAYR Connections
CAYR Connections is a 501(c)3 nonpro t founded in Oak Park.
CAYR stands for “Come As You Are,” and we advocate for embracing neurodiversity, the natural variation of human brains. We believe that there is no “right” type of brain, and that an inclusive, accessible society improves the world for everyone, not just neurodivergent (Autistic, ADHD, etc.) individuals.
Your donation helps us fund current programs and create new ones, too! We are working on a neurodiversity-a rming afterschool and summer program for 2025.
The Day Nursery
located at 1139 Randolph Street in
educates young children ages 2 to age 6, and o ers working families a safe and nurturing environment for young minds to learn and grow. We are proud to share our most recent assessment scores for meeting or exceeding age exceptions for literacy & language, 93%; social-emotional, 87%; and physical development, 95%. Please consider a tax-deductible gift to provide a ordable and equitable access to high quality education for all young children.
Visit thedaynursery.org/ to donate today. Thank you.
Deborah’s Place
For women experiencing homelessness in Chicago, Deborah’s Place opens the door to opportunity and stability. Going beyond just shelter, Deborah’s Place provides a supportive community and wrap-around services. Each year hundreds of women receive dedicated guidance as they pursue their goals for healthier, safer, more independent lives. With a key in her pocket and a team by her side, anything is possible on her journey.
You can help Deborah’s Place change lives by donating or volunteering. Learn more at www.deborahsplace.org.
Learn more about how you can get involved in the ght to end hunger by visiting www.gobeyondhunger.org or donating using this QR Code.
Visit www.cayrconnections. org to learn more. Your generosity helps celebrate “minds of all kinds.”
Austin Coming Together
The Oak Park & River Forest Day Nursery,
Oak Park,
Building self-esteem at BUILD
Dis 16, and had been struggling with low self-esteem and trust, hanging around the wrong group of guys. So early on in our relationship, the four of us took him and his mother grocery shopping: they were so amazed. ‘Nobody ever did this for us,’
D said, looking up with tears in his eyes. ‘Man, why do you guys want to do all of these things for me?’ Some of the youths are just not used to people being nice. Eventually we recommended that he get therapy, and he did. Of course there were bumps
in the road—he still struggled, he really put his mom through the wringer. But we were persistent and consistent, and we started to see the change. Now, he now has a stipend job at BUILD, he has a community of support here. His mom says his behavior has improved. He comes to work every day like he’s supposed to. He’s not disruptive at home. He’s not disruptive at school. So, it takes time but BUILD works.
MMisty’s journey from housing crisis to housing stability with Housing Forward END HOMELESSNESS
isty was just 29 years old when she was diagnosed with congestive heart failure. Since then, her medical condition has progressively worsened. She has battled thyroid cancer, strokes, depression and bariatric surgery. During this time, Misty was forced to leave her family home after her mother died. She relied on friends for a place to live, which only furthered her need for stability. But Misty kept fighting.
After an extensive stay at Loyola University Medical Center, Misty began her journey with Housing Forward. Her hospital social worker knew she needed a stable place to heal and referred Misty to Sojourner House, one of two Medical Respite Programs operated by Housing Forward and our hospital partners. Misty confesses that if
Sojourner House had been unavailable, she would have needed to recuperate in the hospital full time. As she admits, “batteries and a plug” are the life-saving devices she needs to keep her heart pumping.
Misty’s journey from housing crisis to housing stability was secured with her recent move to Broadview Legacy Apartments, Housing Forward’s new permanent supportive housing development that opened in May. When asked how she feels about her new, fully furnished, apartment, she says emphatically, “I love it here!” Her next steps are a surgery to remove excess skin after her loss of over 200 pounds and getting onto the heart transplant list. Working with her case manager, Misty believes there is hope for a happy, stable life while maintaining her health.
The Collaboration for Early Childhood
Early care and education is the workforce behind the workforce. It makes everything else possible, and it allows children to reach their full potential from day one. We are a community-driven organization that cultivates the development of the whole child, birth to age five, by engaging families, local organizations, early childhood educators, caregivers, and health providers to create equitable, nurturing, and interconnected systems of support. Donate today to ensure that our community continues to be a place where families and their babies have the care, relationships, and resources needed to thrive!
Invest in early childhood. Whatever the size, your donation will make an important impact. Learn more and give at www. collab4kids.org.
Ernest Hemingway Foundation of Oak Park
The Ernest Hemingway Foundation of Oak Park is a non-profit 501(c)(3) literary arts and educational foundation dedicated to thoughtful reading and writing. The foundation offers a wide variety of programming, all open to the public, to nurture and encourage creative expression for students and for people of all ages. Through tours and exhibits at Ernest Hemingway’s birthplace museum, the foundation fosters an understanding of his life and work, his Oak Park origins and his impact on world literature. Your gift supports creative outlets for people of all ages through professional teacher development, local author and performing artist programs, inter-generational engagement, a writer-in-residence program, as well as student writing workshops, mentorships, and scholarships.
For more information about us or to donate online go to hemingwaybirthplace.com or
Friends of the Oak Park Conservatory
Built in 1929, the Oak Park Conservatory is a Historic Property of the Park District of Oak Park. Free to the public with 50,000 visitors annually, the Conservatory is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The Conservatory offers three indoor showrooms featuring more than 3,000 plants and two outdoor gardens including a play area for toddlers. The Friends of the Oak Park Conservatory offers a wide range of programs focused on enriching the visitor experience at the Conservatory. From volunteering to educational and recreational opportunities, tours, and classes, there is something for everyone to enjoy year-round. To learn more or to join, visit fopcon.org.
GROWING COMMUNITY
Growing Community Media Media
Growing Community Media is the reader supported newsroom behind four great local news publications covering our neighborhoods and villages. We publish the Austin Weekly News, Wednesday Journal of Oak Park & River Forest, Forest Park Review and Riverside-Brookfield Landmark. We focus our efforts on Essential Civics -- five vital purposes which have never been more important. Democracy. Accountability. Equity. Connection. Civility. Our reporters tell stories which strengthen the fabric of our communities while holding local governments and institutions to account. We know local news is the glue which holds our communities together and we depend on our readers to support our journalism.
Donate for news that matters to you at growingcommunitymedia.org/donate
Founded in 1897,
tial treatment program for severely abused, neglected, and traumatized children and those in need of behavioral intervention ages 3-11. In addition, Hephzibah offers foster care services, comprehensive services for children and families in crisis, positive parenting services and an abuse & neglect prevention program. Hephzibah also provides affordable after-school care and summer camp for Oak Park families of all income levels.
To make a donation, visit www.hephzibahhome.org/donate-now
Holiday Food and Gift Basket
Holiday Food and Gift Basket, a program of the Community of Congregations, has beenspreading holiday joy to families in Oak Park and River Forest since the 1970’s.
In November, every family referred to us receives a grocery gift card paid for with donations. On the second Saturday of December, volunteers deliver holiday gifts that have been purchased by sponsors from a provided wish list. Our small program has a big impact because of the support of community members like you.
Visit our website at www. communityofcongregations.org/holidayfood-gift-basket to find out how you can be a donor, sponsor, or volunteer.
Housing Forward
Housing Forward is passionately focused on one vision – ending homelessness.
Housing Forward is a recognized leader in suburban Cook County offering a coordinated response for people experiencing a housing crisis to quickly resolve their situation. We believe in bold, comprehensive approaches to prevent homelessness whenever possible, respond to people in housing crises, and create stability through permanent housing for the most vulnerable members of our community. Each year we assist more than 2,000 individuals and families with compre
The Imagine Foundation
The mission of the OPRFHS Imagine Foundation is to champion community excellence by raising funds to support OPRF facilities improvements to meet evolving educational needs. The Foundation was created by community volunteers who understand that the school district cannot cover the costs of the entire Imagine Plan out of its cash reserves, nor can taxpayers. The Foundation is an independent nonprofit that works in partnership with the school to augment public investment with private philanthropy. Imagine Foundation invites you to take part in this unique community system of support by donating to help secure the future of OPRF Huskies! www.imagine-foundation. org/donate
L’Arche Chicago
Life is better together…
Quality care for adults with intellectual & developmental disabilities extends beyond the basics of supporting someone with their basic living and medical needs. It’s about creating opportunities to say, “I’m living my best life” and mean it! L’Arche Chicago is committed to the highest quality of care for our core members (adults with disabilities), and our intentional community makes it possible for us to experience life to the fullest, together. Mutual relationships transform lives at all three of our homes, located in Forest Park and the Austin neighborhood of Chicago. Our newest home in Oak Park will serve four more individuals and is thoughtfully designed to be ADA compliant and universally designed to meet all current and future accessibility needs.
You make our community stronger – Join us by making a gift today! www.larchechicago.org
708-660-1600
hello@larchechicago.org
Hephzibah Children’s Association
Celebrate Minds of All Kinds with CAYR Connections
“Idiscovered that I was Autistic only a er my daughter’s diagnosis. I always knew that I was di erent, but I didn’t know why. I struggled to t into a world that didn’t make sense and learned to ‘mask’ or ‘camou age’ my neurodivergent traits, which impacted my mental health. Learning that my mind wasn’t awed—just wired di erently— was a life-changing revelation,” says Megan, a teacher and board member at CAYR Connections.
CAYR (pronounced “care”) stands for “Come As You Are.”
CAYR Connections’ goal is to promote neurodiversity, the natural variation in human brains, and educate our community about ways to be more inclusive, accepting, and a rming of neurodivergent people (e.g., Autistic, ADHD, Dyslexic, etc.) Many late-diagnosed folks like Megan have found that as they accept and embrace their neurodivergence, they feel positive
DECEMBER 3
impacts on their mental health and well-being. Megan adds: “Discovering neurodiversitya rming practices empowered me to embrace who I am and advocate for both myself and my daughter. I know that accommodating myself and my daughter will have a positive impact on our lives. I hope that my advocacy work with CAYR can help others, too.”
CAYR’s programs support neurodiverse individuals and families of all ages. From our CAYRgiver Circle for parents and caregivers of neurodivergent kids & teens, to our partnership with the Chicago Neurodiverse Social Club for neurodivergent adults, we aim to create a more inclusive, accepting community. Our next goal is to open an a erschool and summer program! Learn more and join us at www.cayrconnections.org.
CAYR Connections • cayrconnections.org
OPRF’s MakerSpace
A shining example of the transformative power of modern learning environments
magine a space where students make ideas
What was once a humble arts and crafts room has transformed into the vibrant MakerSpace, a collaborative hub of innovation inside our
offers all students access to a range of tools and technologies. Huskies can get their hands on everything from 3D printers and scanners to
Students are empowered to explore passions, discover new interests, and enhance traditional classroom experiences. Whether they’re recording original songs, designing fashion, printing valves for science projects, or engineering structures to visualize advanced calculus problems, the MakerSpace provides the perfect platform for project-centered learning. As OPRF’s facilities continue to evolve, the MakerSpace serves as an example of the impact 21st century learning spaces can have on the
youth of our community. Imagine Project 2 continues this work by bringing new Physical Education and renovated theatre facilities to OPRF by summer 2026.
The OPRF High School Imagine Foundation champions community excellence by raising funds to support facilities improvements to meet evolving educational needs. You can help ensure that future generations of Huskies have increased access to modern facilities by making a tax-deductible gift to support Project 2. Imagine becoming part of the team
building the future of OPRF!
Learning Edge
For over 30 years, Learning Edge has been a part of the Oak Park and Austin communities. Our mission is to strive for more equity in education by providing Chicago-area students who live in underserved communities free one-to-one tutoring and academic enrichment opportunities enhanced by caring, mentoring relationships. We help students improve their foundational math and reading skills, complete their homework, and foster their love of learning. Your support helps us provide school-year tutoring to over 100 students in grades K through 12 each year.
To donate or volunteer, please visit our website www.learningedgetutoring.org.
Maywood Youth Mentoring Program
Organized in 1993 as a 501c3, the Maywood Youth Mentoring Program has
New Moms
No one should parent alone. For more than 40 years, New Moms has partnered with young moms, 24 and younger, to help them build the con dence needed to achieve long-lasting success. We understand how homelessness and poverty impacts young families. Through housing, paid job training, and family support, our holistic approach provides support for young moms a ected by systemic barriers. By fostering each moms’s unique talents, we blend behavioral research, e ective strategies, and practical experience to create pathways for young families to unlock brighter futures. Join us in this life-changing work. Visit newmoms.org/season/
The Neighborhood Bridge
The Neighborhood Bridge (TNB) is a nonpro t established in 2023 that is working to
The Nineteenth Century Charitable Association
The Nineteenth Century Charitable Association strengthens our community through learning, giving, and sharing our landmark building through space grants to local nonpro ts, who account for 80% of its usage. We provide community outreach, scholarships, and public programming in ve areas: music, art, literature, science, and social sciences. The Nineteenth Century is the owner of 178 Forest Avenue, commonly referred to as the Nineteenth Century Club. Our charitable and cultural activities are supported by our members, volunteers, donors, and by the events held at the building. Programs are open to all and we welcome all ages to join. Our Monday programs are now being live-streamed as well as available a week later on our website for all to enjoy.
If you would like information about volunteering, joining or donating, please call us at 708-386-2729 email to info@ nineteenthcentury.org. You can also make
Oak Park-River Forest Community Foundation
The Oak Park-River Forest Community Foundation invests in our future. We bring together nonpro ts, businesses, civic o cials, and caring residents to uncover and tackle issues of vital importance, and to attract resources to address unmet needs. Today we share our community’s vision to increase high quality childcare and education, support healthcare and mental health services, grow nancial security, and enhance safety, belonging and stability for all who live andwork in our region.
Join the Foundation and help ful ll our vision of a racially just society in which all members of our community thrive and prosper. Donate today at oprfcf.org.
Oak Park Regional Housing Center
Oak Park Regional Housing Center has
OPALGA+: Offering life-changing scholarships for LGBTQIA+ high school graduates
Since 2014, OPALGA+ has annually raised funds and distributed scholarships to local LGBTQIA+ youth and allies for postsecondary education. In 2024, OPALGA+ awarded its largest amount yet: ten $5,000 scholarships for a total award of $50,000. No one can attest more powerfully to the impact of these funds than the students themselves:
“I want to go into psychology. The mental health resources in my community–African American and also LGBTQ–are really low. It’s a market that’s not being helped, and that’s what I want to do. I want to help those people.”
—Kennedy Smith, 2024 OPALGA+ scholar, Lindblom Math & Science Academy now attending University of Wisconsin-Madison
“Receiving the OPALGA+ scholarship definitely reflects my activism for the LGBTQ+ community and continues to make sure they’re being represented, and that their voices aren’t being taken away because their voices matter just as much as everyone else’s do.”
—Sean Groh, 2024 OPALGA+ scholar from Lane Tech attending Drake University
“I attended high school in a Latinx community with few LGBTQ resources. I was the type of student who sat in the back of the room and never said much. Now in college, I’m much more outgoing and am the future president of the Prism Club, the LGBTQ club on campus.”
—Emily Gonzalez, two-time OPALGA+ scholar, attending Dominican University Class of 2027
We are accepting applications for 2025-’26 scholarships through March 15, 2025. Your generosity makes these efforts possible. Please help us support the next generation of LGBTQIA+ leaders. opalga.org/donate
OPALGA+ • opalga.org
Breaking Down Barriers to HealthCare:
Pillars Community Health provides compassionate & accessible whole-person care
Samuel* was referred to Pillars Community Health a er seeking medical attention at a local hospital. Samuel’s rst language was not English, and he found it challenging to comprehend the information they provided, and the questions asked. Without health insurance, and as the primary provider for his family, Samuel was deeply worried that his medical issues might negatively impact his family’s wellbeing. He arrived at Pillars Community Health feeling frustrated, isolated, and anxious about not only his health, but his family’s future.
are available in multiple languages and some services are provided free of charge, while others are o ered on a sliding fee scale, based on each person’s ability to pay.
At Pillars Community Health we envision communities where everyone has access to the care they need, when they need it. We are committed to eliminating barriers to care, such as language and income. Many of our services
A er arriving at Pillars Community Health Samuel was greeted by one of our care coordinators, who spoke his native language, and Samuel relaxed a bit. rough the care coordinator, Samuel and his team collaborated, determined a diagnosis and followed up with the appropriate treatment plan. We applied sliding scale discounts to his services and assisted him in applying for medication assistance. With support, Samuel was also able to recover more quickly and return to work relieving his stress about supporting his family.
*Named altered for anonymity.
Oak Park River Forest Museum
Oak Park River Forest Museum is the caretaker of local history and community storyteller. It o ers many programs and exhibits for visitors and can be rented for private events. The museum, located in a renovated 1898 rehouse at Lake and Lombard next to Stevenson Park, is operated by The Historical Society of Oak Park and River Forest. Check out our family-friendly Hometown Legends Scavenger Hunt that challenges visitors to nd LEGO versions of famous residents hidden around the museum. A gift of any amount funds our 2025 activities, research center, and knowledgeable sta .
Learn more and donate at oprfmuseum.org or call 708-848-6755.
OPRFHS Scholarship Foundation
100 Years of Impact: OPRFHS Scholarship
One Earth Collective
One Earth curates vibrant environmental programming that inspires action, facilitates learning, promotes justice, and fosters equity and inclusion to create resilient communities and a healthier planet. We focus our work in 3 areas - One Earth Film Festival, One Earth Youth Voices, and One Earth Local. One Earth Film Fest’s 14th season will take place April 16th-22nd, 2025. We’re excited to welcome Chicagoland audiences back live, in addition to our virtual screenings. Join us for captivating lms, engaging discussion, impactful action opportunities and community-building. Memberships start at $35.
Learn more and donate at oneearth lmfest. org/give
Opportunity Knocks
Opportunity Knocks was founded in 2009 by families and embraced by a community that
OPRF Infant Welfare Society
Since 1916, OPRF IWS has supported families through the IWS Children’s Clinic, providing medical, dental, and behavioral health services to underserved infants, children, and young adults up to age 21, regardless of insurance status or ability to pay. The Clinic serves families in the western suburbs, Chicago, and Cook and DuPage counties. In FY2024, it provided over 8,000 visits to nearly 3,000 patients. OPRF IWS is powered by its donors, sta , members, and volunteers. Join us in advancing the health and well-being of children in need.
To learn more and donate, visit opr ws.org.
Pillars Community Health
Pillars Community Health is a nonprofit provider of medical, dental, behavioral health, and domestic and sexual violence services to individuals and families who need care. We
PING! (Providing Instruments for the Next Generation)
PING! is a community nonpro t organization providing band and orchestra instruments, mentoring, workshops, and access to lessons, music camps, and trips to students who bene t from support that are in grades 4 through 12 in Oak Park and River Forest, Illinois, public schools. In a community with very high-quality school music programs, PING! students can be on par with peers regardless of their nancial situations and feel like they belong. PING! programming also brings diversity to instrumental music classrooms and beyond, providing access to some traditionally underrepresented populations.
Listing: In person and online, River Forest Public Library serves everyone from toddlers to seniors by connecting them with information, entertainment, and each other in a welcoming space. RFPL Foundation works to ensure the vitality of the Library through advocacy, fundraising, and grants. Foundation grants have enabled the Library to repurpose mechanical room space to build a new multi-purpose meeting room and ADA compliant restroom, refresh the Children’s and Teen spaces, maintain the Memorial Garden for gatherings, o er community events like the Dooley Band concert and Summer Reading Kicko , and more. Please donate at rfplfoundation.org and help your Library continue to serve and connect our community for generations to come.
Sarah’s Inn
Sarah’s Inn is a community-based organization whose mission is to improve the lives of those a ected by domestic violence and to break the cycle of violence for future generations. We o er services in three areas of program focus: Intervention services for families a ected by domestic violence that includes Advocacy and Counseling; Prevention education for youth to give them the tools to develop healthy relationships; and Training and Education for professionals and community-based organizations to create a network of skilled ambassadors. Intervention services are con dential, bilingual (English/ Spanish), and o ered free of charge to survivors and their children.
Make a donation at sarahsinn.org/donate
Share Food Share Love Food Pantry
Our food pantry serves 15 villages, where over 7,000 of our neighbors are living below the poverty line. Most (83%) live in just 7 of our 15 villages. Which makes ours a region of “haves” and “have-nots”. But we are all neighbors here. Like many food pantries, we are a not-for-pro t business. Which means our collective purpose is to one day go out of business: We are working collectively toward a time when neighbors in our region are no longer oppressed with hunger. A time when enough of us have come together to uplift all of us.
End Hunger. Uplift Neighbors. Learn how you can help at sharefoodsharelove.org
The Symphony of Oak Park & River Forest
The award-winning Symphony of Oak Park & River Forest and its esteemed conductor Jay Friedman continue to bring extraordinary and accessible concerts to our community. Ticket sales provide less than half the funds needed for the Symphony’s performances. Your gift keeps the orchestra going strong and allows us to maintain a ordable ticket prices, including free admission for all students through college. Please help us continue and strengthen our tradition of bringing beautiful and inspiring music to Oak Park, River Forest, Forest Park and neighboring communities.
Make your end-of-year tax-deductible donation at SymphonyOPRF.org, or: P.O. Box 3564, Oak Park, IL 60303-3564.
The Joyful Giving Catalog2024
When Rose Mattax was a child, she treasured the idea of a neighborhood being a close-knit community where people looked out for each other, spent time together, and supported each other. In her adulthood, she longed for that connection with her neighbors. Everything changed when L’Arche Chicago bought the house across the street.
This gathering is a highlight for everyone, with new players often joining in.
Shortly after L’Arche moved in, Rose received a knock on her door. Jean, a core member resident, and an assistant brought over home-baked cookies, marking the start of many new friendships. Over the past eight years, these connections have grown into cherished traditions and lasting memories.
L’Arche provides integrated homes for adults with intellectual disabilities.
Every Wednesday, Rose sits across from Noah, another core member, at the L’Arche Chicago dining table, ready for their weekly game of Uno.
On less frequent occasions, Jean will get a hankering for a nonalcoholic beer, and Rose gladly accompanies her to O’Sullivan’s in Forest Park. Jean’s wit and humor never fail to charm the server, making these outings truly special. Rose’s home has transformed into what the community fondly calls the “L’Arche Annex.” For many of the young assistants, moving into Rose’s upstairs apartment is a significant step as they prepare for the next chapter in their lives. This maintains the sense of community – friendship, support and mutual growth.
“I couldn’t have imagined the joy that L’Arche as a neighbor would bring into our lives. I treasure every moment of these invaluable friendships. Life is better with L’Arche as a neighbor.” For that reason, Rose is known to always extend invitations for others to join the L’Arche community
L’arche Chicago • 708-660-1600 • larchechicago.org
Nineteenth Century Charitable Association Presents “Raining Pianos” Program
The Nineteenth Century Charitable Association is known for sharing its building with the community. This year it has extended this mission to extend the use of its important asset, the Steinway pianos with some of our talented community members. This past summer our newest program, entitled “Raining Pianos” was held at 1pm on the fourth Monday during the months of June thru September. It featured five accomplished pianists from surrounding communities who sprinkled us with music from the nineteenth century. Each pianist performed on our lovingly restored Steinway piano. Our series began with Heather Peterson from Oak Park, who after her beautiful performance
explained how her chosen pieces related to her life. The talented Cacie Miller, who performed in July, said her music has helped her navigate the world around her. In August, brothers Brian Ling(a sixth grader), and Owen Ling (a high schooler)shared the spotlight. Both brothers have competed in international competitions and performed at London’s Royal Albert Hall and New York’s Carnegie Hall. Each brother has also received first place awards in performance. Our summer series ended with a member of the Nineteenth Century Charitable Association, Doug Cotsamire. He has taken piano lessons since second grade, and has been studying classical piano in Oak Park for eleven years. Recently retired from his rheumatology practice Doug amazed us by performing some of his favorite piano pieces.
At L’Arche Chicago, supporting adults with disabilities includes valuing the strong, meaningful bonds that form when you build friendships within the community.
Thrive Counseling Center
Thrive Counseling Center has provided mental health services to Oak Park and surrounding communities for over 120 years. We build healthy minds, families, and communities by empowering people to attain mental and emotional well-being, regardless of their ability to pay. We envision a world where mental health is valued, proactively nurtured, and in reach of everyone.
• Individual therapy
• Group therapy
• Psychiatry and medication management
• 24/7 Crisis intervention
• Case management
• Suicide awareness and prevention training
• Thrive Talks community education programs
Open Monday-Thursday 9am-8pm, Friday 9am-5pm, and Saturday from 9am-2pm. To learn more or donate, please visit thrivecc. org or call 708-383-7500.
Way Back Inn
Since 1974, Way Back Inn has successfully provided long-term residential and outpatient treatment for substance use and gambling disorders. Our mission is to rebuild lives damaged by addiction in a personalized healing environment. This holiday season, we ask that you gift responsibly with the youth in your family. Children who have early exposure to gambling experiences, including lottery tickets, are more likely to develop a gambling problem later in life.
For more information or to make a donation to our program, go to: www. waybackinn.org or call us at 708-345-8422.
West Cook YMCA
When you give to the West Cook YMCA, you impact our community today and tomorrow.
100% of your tax-deductible donation goes directly to providing scholarships to children, adults, and seniors- your friends and neighbors-transforming their lives through access to health screenings, chronic disease prevention programs, after-school programs, swim lessons, homeless prevention for residents, and Y memberships that can open the door to help each person become their best self.
To donate, visit // westcookymca.org/give or send your check to West Cook YMCA, 255 S. Marion St., Oak Park, IL 60302. (708-383-5200)
West Suburban Special Recreation Association
West Suburban Special Recreation Association (WSSRA) provides recreational programming for individuals with disabilities who reside in Oak Park, River Forest and nine other surrounding communities. Donations to WSSRA help provide nancial assistance to those participating in our year-round programs and summer day camp.
To make a donation please visit wssra.net.
Wonder Works Children’s Museum in Oak Park
Wonder Works Children’s Museum has been a community gem on North Avenue since 2003. Our small but mighty museum plays a very important role in nurturing young minds, fostering a love of learning, and bolstering social and emotional skills. In 2024, we continued to grow museum access for ALL children through discounted admission for families with nancial needs, sensory-friendly play sessions, and social service agency partnerships. As a 501c3 non-pro t organization, individual donations to Wonder Works Children’s Museum are crucial to bringing our mission and programs to life.
Visit Wonder-Works.org/give to donate and support the museum.
Sponsored Content
OPRF Museum Tells Your Community’s Stories—Large or Small
Good things often come in small packages.
That’s why the Illinois Association of Museums named Oak Park River Forest Museum the state’s Small Museum of the Year soon after it opened its doors in 2017. The museum is in an 1898 firehouse that underwent a $1 million renovation, transforming a vacant building into a welcoming Oak Park Landmark next to
be rented for private events. OPRF Museum, at 129 Lake St., Oak Park, is operated by The Historical Society of Oak Park and River Forest. The featured exhibit on the museum’s first floor tells the 150-year history of OPRF High School.
Whether you’re interested in sports, the arts or building additions, this exhibit has it all.
The museum’s second floor contains a “Wall of Fame” highlighting famous residents, a children’s play area, and an award-winning exhibit about Fair Housing.
Visit our Fields Research Center, open by appointment, to research almost everything related to the villages including homes, community groups and businesses. Membership has many benefits. For information, visit oprfmuseum.org or call 708848-6755 and follow The Historical Society of Oak Park and River Forest on Facebook.
Building Community, One Story at a Time
“I
t’s not Wednesday unless I read the paper,” says long-time reader Jeannette, who connected to her community by reading the Wednesday Journal since she moved to Oak Park in 1994.
“It is more than just a local paper. It is a feeling of belonging in a special community...stories about people and organizations in OPRF doing great things that I would not otherwise know about,” she says.
Growing Community Media brings a sense of belonging and connection to thousands of readers in Oak Park, River Forest, Forest Park, Riverside, Brook eld, and the West Side of Chicago.
but it also keeps readers informed about local government, businesses, nonpro t organizations, events, schools, and much more.
“ anks for keeping us informed!” says longtime reader Kelly.
“I gi a subscription to all my new clients in Brook eld and Riverside,” shared Allan, a longtime supporter of local news. Not only does local news build community,
Our reporters tell stories that strengthen the fabric of our communities while holding local governments and institutions to account. We know local news is the glue that holds our communities together and we depend on our readers to support our journalism. To those who subscribe, purchase papers at newsstands, advertise with us, and donate to our community news, we thank you.
“Keep up the good work!” - Herbert You can donate for news that matters to you at growingcommunitymedia.org/donate
December 15, 2024
Holiday Promise
February 16, 2025
Espectacular Espanol
June 8, 2025
Resplendent Romantics
Concerts on Sundays, 4 pm at Concordia University Chapel, River Forest Students through college admitted free of charge
Free parking at 1124 Bonnie Brae Place
Play an instrument?
Email SymphonyOPRF@gmail.com if you'd like to join the orchestra.
Contact us for tickets or more information! 708.218.2648 | theSymphonyOPRF@gmail.com SymphonyOPRF.org
AEmpowerment: The Impact of the
OPRFHS Scholarship Foundation
s Oak Park and River Forest High School celebrates its 150th anniversary, the OPRFHS Scholarship Foundation proudly reflects on its long-standing commitment to empowering students. In the 2023-24 school year, 92 graduating seniors received a total of $222,150 in scholarships, allowing them to pursue their dreams at 4-year universities, 2-year colleges, and trade schools.
What makes the Foundation particularly unique is its connection to the high school. Few high schools can boast of a dedicated scholarship foundation as robust and impactful as ours. Since its founding in 1924, the Foundation has been more than just a financial resource. It stands as a testament to the power of community-driven investment in education. Each scholarship is an intentional contribution to a student’s future, recognizing character, academic excellence, leadership, artistic talent, community service, and more. These awards don’t just open doors—they create pathways to long-term success.
The ripple effect of this investment is seen throughout the community. Students who benefit
from these scholarships are not only prepared to succeed in their fields but also to give back in meaningful ways. Many become leaders, artists, and innovators who return to support the very Foundation that helped them get started.
As we honor this remarkable milestone, we invite you to join us in continuing this legacy of opportunity. Your support ensures that future generations of OPRFHS students will have the resources they need to reach their full potential. Visit scholarships4oprfhs.org to contribute and make a lasting impact. 150 Years of
Season of Giving Season of Giving
Animal Care League
B24, B26
Arts Alliance Forest Park B24
Austin Coming Together .................. B14, B15, B24
Wonder Works ............................................ B17, B34
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Committed to Oak Park and River Forest
Whether you’re seeing a movie at the Lake Theatre or heading for a hike in the G.A.R. Woods, we think you should be able to get all of your banking done in your neighborhood… with people who love the area as much as you do. Byline is privileged to be a part of the Oak Park and River Forest community, and we are proud to partner with local nonprofits like Beyond Hunger and sponsor local events like Thursday Night Out in downtown Oak Park.
To learn more about our commitment to Oak Park and River Forest, visit bylinebank.com/oprf