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ForestParkReview.com ForestParkReview.com Vol. 103, No. 53
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REVIEW F O R E S T PA R K
DECEMBER 30, 2020
Byline Bank boosts local businesses PAGE 6
East footballll stadium coming down
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Three uncontested races for April’s election D209, D91 and park board elections will be uncontested By MARIA MAXHAM Editor
Forest Parkers will be asked to vote in several local races on April 6. All filings are in, and all of the races will be uncontested, including that for Proviso Township High School District 209, somewhat unexpected since the group Proviso Together formed and began running candidates in 2015. Four seats on the D209 board will be open in April, and all four incumbents whose seats are expiring have filed to run in the election. Proviso Together has announced its support of incumbents Amanda Grant and current Board President Rodney Alexander. Incumbents Samuel Valtierrez and Arbdella Patterson are also running, though not as part of the Proviso Together slate. There are no additional candidates running for the D209 board. Forest Park’s elementary school district, District 91, also has four seats available and four candidates seeking election. Of the four current members whose terms are expiring, only Kyra Tyler, board president, is running again. Mary Win Connor, Eric Connor and Kimberly Rostello will not seek reelection to the board. Steve Rummell and John Lyons, who ran unsuccessfully for positions on the D91 school board during the last election, will be on the ballot. Newcomer Lerin Cross is in the running as well. There will be one open spot on the Park District of Forest Park’s board, as Eric Entler’s term is expiring. He has decided not to seek reelection. Krysten Lyons is the only candidate running for the position.
File Photo
LAST BIG BASH: Forest Park’s annual St. Patrick’s Day Parade on March 7 was the last major town event before COVID-19 related shutdowns began.
COVID’s unending upending Pandemic touched every aspect of life in Forest Park By MARIA MAXHAM Editor
Memes abound about what a terrible year 2020 was. In one, Doc from the movie Back to the Future, with a frazzled
IN Crime . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 THIS Big Week . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7 ISSUE Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Obituaries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
look on his face, says to the character played by Michael J. Fox, “Marty, whatever happens, don’t ever go to 2020!” Another is captioned, “If 2020 was a slide” and shows a kid on a playground about to slide down a giant kitchen grater. One more reads, “If 2020 was a hula hoop” with a photo of a thick loop of barbed wire. In 2020, hard blows hit the world and Forest Park, most of them related to
The year in food PAGE 8
COVID-19. People have died, the economy is bleak, and businesses have staggered, some have shuttered, a few have opened). Depression is on the rise and children are struggling to figure out how to learn in a new environment. We can’t spend time with those we love. These things are hard. Although the vaccine offers hope, it’s still uncertain when things will See YEAR IN REVIEW on page 4
Chamber president’s term ends PAGE 10
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