
































Large achievement gaps persist between white students and their Black and Hispanic peers
By BOB SKOLNIK Contributing ReporterNeither Riverside-Brookfield High School nor Lyons Township High School ranked in the top 10 percent of public high schools in Illinois on the latest Illinois School Report card released last month by the Illinois State Board of Education. Both schools missed out on the coveted “exemplary” rating that goes to the top 10 percent of schools as measured by the ISBE, but they earned the next highest ranking, the “commendable” rating. About 80 percent of public high schools in Illinois received the commendable rating
A long-delayed plan to digitize hundreds of hours of videotape in the archive of Riverside TV will move ahead early next year thanks to a roughly $2,300 grant from Riverside Township.
The township’s board of trustees approved the grant at their meeting earlier this month, allowing Riverside TV to save some of its ear liest efforts to chronicle village gover nment and special events dating back some 26 years.
“I think some of these might be quite entertaining,” said Colin Hughes, the chair man of the Riverside TV Commission. “I think a lot of towns and villages started getting into video when digital came around.”
At the time the late Dr Bob Novak and late Don Far nham started the fledgling video production operation, they didn’t enjoy the kind of support Riverside TV gets from village gover nment now. It was a much more confrontational relationship.
“I think that first meeting that Don Farn ham went to with a camera he got thrown out,” Hughes said. “It’s very much a welcome thing now, but they didn’t have funding to do it. They were tur ning the screws on the village to give them the [cable franchise fee] money that they were entitled to, to have a channel. And kudos to them for doing it, be cause I think there are going to be some in credible things that come out of those two boxes that people will enjoy.”
Hughes said there are a little more than 200 VHS tapes, each containing between one and three hours of content, to be converted into digital format. When he joined the commission several years ago, he took on the digitization project in his spare time, but soon realized he’d never have the time to get it done.
“I don’t have 600 hours to do this project, so that’s when we decided to start looking for quotes for a company that could apply some economies of scale and make it go a little bit faster,” Hughes said.
The commission will use a company called Chicago Scanning to convert the VHS tapes into digital files Hughes said the commission likely will deliver the tapes to the company early in 2023 and that it will take four to six
Colin Hughes, chairman of the Riverside TV Commission, sorts through some of the more than 200 VHS tapes the group is planning to con vert to a dig ital format a er ob taining a grant from Riverside Township. e tapes (below) include v ideo from events dating back to the beginning of the commission in 1996.
May 5, 2000 dedication ceremony, featuring an appearance by Gov. George Ryan, for the 26th Street water tower.
Other tapes include a tour of the Riverside Post Of fice, a video of the Hofmann Dam restoration in 2002 – 10 years before it was demolished – a Central School talent show from 2008 and a video from 1998 marking the launch of Jen’s Kids, a char ity for med in memory of the late Riverside Arts Center instructor Jennifer Lynn Allen to provide art experiences for children under hospital care
Editor Bob Uphues
Director of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Michael Romain
Digital Publishing & Technology Manager Briana Higgins
Staff Photographers Alex Rogals, Shanel Romain
Design/Production Manager Andrew Mead
Editorial Design Manager Javier Govea
Designer Susan McKelvey
S ales and Marketing Representatives
Marc Stopeck, Lourdes Nicholls, Kamil Brady Business & Development Manager Mary Ellen Nelligan
Donor Relations Manager/Food Editor Melissa Elsmo
Sales & Digital Development Manager Stacy Coleman Circulation Manager Jill Wagner EMAIL jill@oakpark.com
Publisher Dan Haley Special Projects Manager Susan Walker
Chair Judy Gre n Treasurer Nile Wendor f Deb Abrahamson, Gary Collins, Darnell Shields, Sheila Solomon, Eric Weinheimer
The goal will be to make all of that content available publicly, via the commission’s YouTube and cable TV channels Hughes said the old footage may also be a good resource for the commission’s “Memories of Riverside” series where they interview older residents about their lives growing up in the village decades ago.
A list of VHS tapes included in the commission’s grant application to the township reveal an array of notable events in village history. In addition to many July 4 parade broadcasts and village board meetings, there are history programs and even video of a
There could be some other surprises, too “Nobody has looked at this stuff in 20, 25 years, so someone actually needs to watch through it and see what’s actually on the tapes even though many are labeled,” Hughes said. “Maybe some of those labels aren’t accurate and many don’t have labels at all.”
The grant is the township’s latest in help ing other organizations preserve Riverside history. In the past couple of years, Riverside Township has awarded a pair of grants totaling more than $7,000 to the Riverside Public Library to digitize its microfilm collection of newspapers, including the Riverside-Brookfield Landmark.
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The Linda Sokol Francis Brook eld Library, 3541 Park Ave., invites you to join William Buchholtz for an evening of live woodland ute music and storytelling on Nov. 29 at 7 p.m. in the Meeting Room.
Register to attend by calling 708-485-6917, ext. 130 or at brook eld.evanced.info/signup
njoy the festive season at Brook eld Zoo’s 41st Annual Holiday Magic festival of lights, which kicks o . 25-27 and continues through the end of the year on the following dates: Nov. 30-Dec. 4 and Dec. 7-11, 14-18 and 26-31 from 3 to 9 p.m. each night.
Would you like your child to receive a personalized letter from Santa Claus himself? Brook eld Parks & Recreation has you covered.
Pick up and return a form at the recreation o ce in the lower level of Brook eld Village Hall, 8820 Brook eld Ave., or email a request to sferrari@brook eldil.gov. Completed applications must be received by Nov. 28. Letters will be sent the week of Dec. 5.
Walk through the 600-foot tunnel of lights and pose for photos in the illuminated gingerbread house or luminous 20-foot orb. The West Mall will be a two-mile Sea of Lights synchronized to music. A 41-foottall tree with lights “dancing” to choreographed music will be just inside the North Gate.
Several indoor and outdoor animal areas will be open, kids can deposit written holiday greetings and drawings for the animals and Santa Claus in designated boxes, and you can also take a spin on the skating rink ($7, skate rental extra). Restaurants, food stands and gift shops will also be open.
Regular zoo admission and parking apply (advance reservation required for South Gate entry). Visit CZS.org/HolidayMagic for more info.
■ Kuratko-Nosek Funeral Home, 2447 Desplaines Ave. in North Riverside, invites you to ll a holiday stocking for troops overseas and veterans. Stop by Monday through Saturday between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. and pick up a free stocking. Fill it up and return it through Dec. 16. Call 708-447-2500 for more.
■ Riverside Arts Center, 32 E. Quinc y St. presents “Plot Structure,” featuring paintings by Matthew Girson; “Continue a Poem,” a group show featuring the work of Nicholas Frank, Lauren Fueyo and Nyeema Morgan; and “Dwell,” an installation
of sculptures by Margie Glass Sula, through Dec. 30. Gallery hours are Thursday-Saturday from 1 to 5 p.m.
There’s also “The Ar t of Seeing,” featuring botanical boxes by Shilin Hora, at the Riverside Town Hall, 27 Riverside Road, through Dec. 31. Viewing hours are Monday-Thursday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Friday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Visit riversidear tscenter.com for more.
■ North Riverside Public Library, 2400 Desplaines Ave., presents Calming Craft for Kids (with adult) on Nov. 25 at 4 p.m., Family Movie Matinee on Nov. 26 at 1 p.m., Morning Munchkin Stories
with Ms. Karen (child with adult) on Nov. 28 at 10:30 a.m., Chair Yoga (in person) Nov. 28 at 6:30 p.m. Silly Science (10-under with adult) on Nov. 29 at 4 p.m. and Story Safari (child with adult) on Nov. 30 at 10:30 a.m. Register for programs online at northriversidelibrary.org/events-new.
■ Linda Sokol Francis Brook eld Library, 3541 Park Ave., presents Read to the Dogs (youth ser vices) with the Hinsdale Humane Society of Nov. 29 at 7 p.m., Dinosaur Hat Craft (grades 1-5) on Nov. 30 at 4 p.m. and Family Fun Story Night (all ages with caregiver) on Nov. 30 at 6:30 p.m. Call 708-485-6917 or visit online at brook eld
Nor th Riverside Park Mall, 7501 Cermak Road, will hold a toy drive bene ting The Children’s Center of Cicero -Ber wyn from Nov. 25 through Dec. 15.
Bring a new, unwrapped toy to the customer service desk in the mall’s center court. The mall will deliver donations in time for Christmas.
You can also bring the kids to visit Santa in his workshop located in the mall’s center court daily through Dec. 24. Photo packages are available for purchase. Visit northriversideparkmall.com/santa-photos for times of operation and details.
Take a virtual visit overseas to amazing Christmas markets in ve European cities during “Christmas Markets in Prague and Germany” on Nov. 28 at 7 p.m.
The Linda Sokol Francis Brook eld Library invites you to join Eugene Flynn as he shares his adventures enjoying good food, friends and festivities.
Register to get a link to the program by calling 708485-6917, ext. 130 or at brook eld.evanced.info/signup.
evanced.info/signup to register for programs.
■ Riverside Public Library, 1 Burling Road, presents Legopalooza on Nov. 26 from 10 a.m. to noon; Knitting, Crochet and Needlework Group on Nov. 28 from 7 to 8:30 p.m.; and Create a Cricut Leather Keychain on Nov. 29 at 7 p.m. To register for programs, visit online at riversidelibrar y.org/events
■ The Brook eld Elks Lodge, 9022 31st St., hosts bingo the second Sunday of every month. Doors open at 1 p.m. and games start at 2 p.m. with cash payouts
Riverside trustees on Nov. 17 approved spending nearly $70,000 to expand its closed circuit surveillance camera network, waiving competitive bidding to award a contract to Griffon Systems to install 26 cameras at four locations, including village facilities and critical water-system infrastructure.
Griffon Systems is the vendor for surveil lance cameras the village began purchasing in phases in the installation the new cameras village of will have cameras in the downto gover nment at key entry routes for v in other areas
Riverside ship trustees purchased rity cameras which will outside the township hall and grounds.
About $42,000 of the total cost is coming from capital funds set aside for the police department in the 2022 budget for the cameras. The rest is being split between the Riverside Department of Parks and Recreation and the village’s water/sewer fund because of where some of the new cameras will be located.
The expense is also being defrayed by an $18,000 grant awarded to the village in 2016, but never used, to install security cameras at the train station. Since several of the cameras being installed will cover the train right of way, the grant money can be used for this project, said Riverside Finance Di rector Karin Johns.
Four cameras will be installed at the new recreation headquarters at 43 E. Quincy St. while five will be mounted at the water pumping station on 26th Street, which the village operates in partnership with North Riverside.
Five cameras will be installed at Fire Station 2, which is located at 59 Pine Ave. and the water system facility next door at 63 Pine Ave., while 13 others will be installed at the main fire station/police department complex at 31 Riverside Road
None of the new cameras is a license plate reader type device, although the vil lage does have a handful of such cameras installed at key locations, including the downtown train station, in front of the township hall, at Harlem Avenue/East Quincy Street and at First Avenue/Ridgeood Road.
Those license plate eaders are part of rside’s closed and are not connected to a larger system, such as F lock which allows and even prientities to share cameras being purchased in this latphase are high definition models viding 270-de gree
The cameras also have the capability of ef fectively ob taining video in low-light conditions.
Public Safety Director Matthew Buckley said there’s no fir m date on when the new cameras will be delivered and installed
“It all depends on product supply,” he said.
Riverside trustees are expected to ap prove a further expansion of the surveil lance camera initiative for 2023. A $30,000 line item has been included in next year’s preliminary budget, which is expected to be approved by trustees on Dec. 1.
According to Buckley, those cameras will likely be placed at other high-traf fic exit/ entry locations in Riverside as well as at other key village locations, such as the public works facility in Riverside Lawn, where camera coverage is lacking
There are five IRS filing statuses. They generally depend on the taxpayer’s marital status as of Dec.31. However, more than one filing status may apply in certain situations. If this is the case, taxpayers can usually choose the filing status that allows them to pay the least amount of tax. When preparing and filing a tax return, the filing status affects:
• If the taxpayer is required to file a federal tax return
• If they should file a return to receive a refund
• Their standard deduction amount
• If they can claim certain credits
• The amount of tax they should pay
Here are the five filing statuses: Single. Normally this status is for taxpayers who are unmarried, divorced or legally separated under a divorce or separate maintenance decree governed by state law.
Married filing jointly. A married taxpayers can file a joint tax return with their spouse. When a
spouse passes away, the widowed spouse can usually file a joint return for that year.
Married filing separately. Married couples can choose to file separate tax returns. When doing so it may result in less tax owed than filing a joint tax return.
Head of household. Unmarried taxpayers may be able to file using this status, but special rules apply. For example, the taxpayer must have paid more than half the cost of keeping up a home for themselves and a qualifying person living in the home for half the year.
Qualifying widow(er) with dependent child. This status may apply to a taxpayer if their spouse died during one of the previous two years and they have a dependent child. Other conditions also apply.
Attention to detail.
Of all the compliments we receive, that’s one we aim to achieve—and take to heart—more than just about any other.
As we celebrate our 44th Thanksgiving as a family-owned business, we are grateful for the multiple generations of employees and customers who continue to make all those details possible.
Here are portions of a note that a customer sent to me a few weeks ago (shared with her permission):
“Phase I of our landscaping was installed today. Bob and I are thrilled with the results.
Thank you for your visits and input for the patio and landscaping… your contractor poured the stamped concrete, and it looks great. The final size is pretty much to the specifications that you laid out a year ago when you first looked at our sad backyard…
Your landscape designer was great to work with: thoughtful, patient, knowledgeable and professional. The installation team was also top-notch and did an outstanding job setting the plants in. Rarely do you see such careful work and attention to detail. There is, of course, more to be completed next year. But I appreciate the excellent attention to detail for what was I’m sure a relatively small project for you.”
To be clear, no project is “small.” Neither is our gratitude for all who have entrusted McAdam to serve them over the years.
For the first time in recent memory are now two residents of Nor th Ri serving on the Riverside-Brookfield School District 208 Board of Education.
On Nov. 15, the school board v to appoint for mer Komarek school member Carolyn Lach to fill a created when Ramona Towner resigned cause she moved out of the district.
Lach will serve at least until next spring’s school board elections. She told the Landmark she plans to run for a seat on the board in the April election when four four-year ter ms and the last two years of Towner’s ter m will be on the ballot.
“I’m not sure if I’m going to run for the two-year [ter m] or the four-year yet,” Lach said. “I’ ll have to make a decision in the next couple weeks.”
Other incumbents running for re-elec tion in 2023 include Zalas, Laura Hruska and Mike Welch.
Zalas and Hruska, who will be running for her fifth ter m on the school board, will seek four-year ter ms on the school board while Welch will run for the two-year ter m. The school board filing period be gins Dec. 12 and ends Dec 19. Candidates for the school board need only 50 valid signatures on their nominating petitions to get on the ballot.
Another incumbent whose ter m is set to end next spring, Bill Durkin, told the Landmark last month he is still undecided about whether to run ag ain.
Caroly n LachKlaisner, picked a for mer RBHS school board member, Mike Welch, to fill the va cancy.
This time the board decided not to in terview any of the nine people, including Lach, who applied to re place Towner In stead, they reviewed the written applications and quickly settled on Lach
“We all did a ranking of the candidates, and she was at or near the top of for all of the board members, so it made for an easy decision,” said District 208 school board President Deanna Zalas.
Zalas said that Lach’s application last year didn’t have anything to do her being chosen this year.
“She has substantial school board experience, which is just helpful to have,” Zalas said. “It’s a seamless transition for her.”
Zalas said that since the appointment was only for a short time before next year’s elections, the school board did not feel it was necessary to interview the applicants
“She has a child at the school, which I think is a helpful addition to the board,” Zalas said. “That’s my personal opinion.”
Lach, 54, is the director of financial aid Nor th Park University, a position she held since 1999. She grew up in southest suburban Burbank. After graduatfrom Easter n Illinois University, she taught high school and junior high school math and science.
She taught one year at her alma mater, vis High School in Burbank, and another year in Wauconda before getting into higher education as a financial aid of ficer ush University. Lach has a master’s ee in human services and counseling from DePaul University.
Lach was appointed to the Komarek District 94 school board in 2015 but was not re-elected when she finished fourth among five candidates running for a four-year ter m in 2019. However, because no one filed to run for the two two-year ter ms on the ballot in 2019, the District 94 school board appointed Lach to serve out one of those ter ms, so she never left the school board.
In 2021, Lach decided not to run for another ter m on the Komarek school board because she no longer had any children at tending the school.
The other applicants to fill the Towner vacancy were Boyd, Beatrice Alvare z, Richard DeLeon, Candice Gizewski, Tom Lupfer, Tricia McVicker, Keyla Navarrete and Jose ph Reyna.
There had been no school board member from Nor th Riverside on the RBHS school board from 2009 until 2017 when Gina Sierra was elected. In 2021, Sier ra decided not to run for another ter m but Gasca, a resi dent of North Riverside, was elected.
“I can tell you personally I thought it was impor tant to have some additional communities represented,” Zalas said.
2001 Des Plaines Ave.
www.mcadamlandscape.com
Last year, Lach, who served on the Komarek District 94 school board from 2015 until 2021, applied to fill another vacancy on the RBHS school board. She interviewed with the school board then and apparently made a good impression, although the board deadlocked on picking a re placement.
Eventually a state of ficial, West 40 Inter mediate Service Executive Director Mark
“If we were looking at a longer dura tion ter m, much like the vacancy in 2021, I think the board would have collectively ap proached this dif ferently,” Zalas said. “But this is a five-month appointment.”
Lach, who has lived in Nor th Riverside for around 20 years, has two sons, one a colle ge sophomore who graduated from RBHS in 2021 and another who is now a junior at RBHS.
Lach said helping get a referendum passed to expand and renovate Komarek School was one of her biggest accomplishments in District 94. She was also involved in hiring Komarek District 94 Superin tendent Todd Fitzgerald, switching students from Macintosh laptop computers to Chromebooks and approving a new math cur riculum more aligned with the cur riculum at RBHS.
Brookfield police continue to investigate an ar med vehicular hijacking that took place in the 4600 block of Elm Avenue on Nov. 20 at about 9:15 p.m.
No one was injured during the incident, according to police The victim, a 63-year old Brookfield man, reportedly told police that he might have been followed as he drove home from the Bensenville area that night, making stops at the Jewel in Stickney and Walgreens in Lyons along the way.
As he was unloading groceries from his Ford Fusion, four men approached him. At least one of the men was ar med, the victim told police One of the men announced the hijacking and demanded the car keys from the victim, who complied.
Offenders entered the Ford and the vehicle was last seen heading east, followed by a black SUV.
As part of their investigation, police were seeking surveillance camera video from near the man’s residence and along his route of travel from Bensenville As of the mor ning of Nov. 21, the stolen vehicle had not been recovered.
■ Marcus A. Arzola, 30, of New Century, Kansas, has been charged with felony aggravated battery to a police officer and felony possession of false ID after he fled from police in an alle gedly stolen vehicle, which struck a North Riverside police officer, injuring him, when the impact threw him into the side of a nearby squad car.
Police responded to the parking lot at CVS, 7200 Cer mak Road, on Nov. 16 at 8:55 a.m. to investigate a man slumped over inside a back Acura. After waking up the driver police tried to confir m his identity.
However, he reportedly attempted to shut the driver’s side door and quickly reversed the car, throwing a police officer into the squad car. The Acura then sped off northbound on Harlem Avenue Paramedics transported the injured police officer to the hospital for treatment of unspecified injuries.
A computer check of the Acura’s Kansas license plate number showed that the car had been stolen out of Kansas City. Police recovered the driver’s cellphone, which had fallen out of the car, and other items, allowing them to confir m Arzola as their suspect.
At about 9:30 a.m. on Nov. 18, police located the Acura, unoccupied, at the intersection
of Home Avenue and 14th Street in Berwyn. The vehicle now displayed a Missouri license plate, which police lear ned had been stolen in September
Police staked out the vehicle and just be fore noon took Arzola into custody as he ap proached the vehicle.
■ North Riverside police arrested a 34-year old Chicago man, charging him with ag gravated battery to a police officer after he allegedly choked an officer in the midst of a reportedly alcohol-fueled scuffle inside and outside of an apartment building in the 8500 block of Cer mak Road on Nov. 19 at about 10:45 p.m.
Police responded to the apartment building for a reported disturbance and found numer ous people yelling and acting aggressively toward one another inside the building. People eventually exited, but the situation escalated when a 28-year old Chicago man allegedly punched the 34-year old, knocking him out. A police officer reportedly went to aid the injured man, who regained consciousness and allegedly lunged at the police officer, grabbing him by the throat and squeezing his airway.
The 34-year old man reportedly did not stop fighting with the officer until another of ficer used a Taser to subdue him.
■ North Riverside police responded to the east parking lot of the Nor th Riverside Park Mall, 7501 Cer mak Road, on the after noon of Nov. 14 after a 73-year-old Chicago woman called to re port that someone had burglarized her vehicle.
The victim told police she ar rived at the mall at about 10:45 a.m., parked her car and retur ned to it around noon. Police did not re port signs of forced entry to the car. Missing from the vehicle was the victim’s purse, which contained multiple credit cards, a driver’s license and a Social Secu rity card.
While the victim was speaking to police, she received a text message reporting someone had unsuccessfully tried to purchase $562 in clothes from a store called Fame
Security video from the mall’s park ing lot cameras re por tedly showed a man entering the victim’s vehicle at 11:35 a.m. and exiting about a minute later with the purse. He then gets into a red SUV driven by a woman. The vehicle was last seen heading eastbound on Cer mak Road.
■ A man doing construction work at a home in the 200 block of Michaux Road, Riverside, went to police on Nov. 19, a day after someone entered his unlocked work van while he was at lunch and removed four credit cards and two circular saws.
According to police, fraudulent credit card purchases were subsequently made at Best Buy, GameStop and Foot Locker in North Riverside.
These items were obtained from police re ports filed by the Ri verside, North Ri verside and Brookfield police departments, Nov. 1420, and re present a portion of the incidents to which police responded. Unless otherwise indicated, anybody named in these re ports has only been charged with a crime. These cases hav e not been adjudicated.
— Compiled by Bob UphuesAs community gardens go, the Riverside Community garden may have a tiny footprint, but it has plenty of ambition and confidence in its mission. A re gistered nonprofit organization since 2019, the garden through its volunteers produces and donates fresh produce to the food insecure and food pantries and spreads the gospel of growing your own food via seed and plant swaps as well as family programming in par tnership with local org anizations
And, thanks to a $5,000 grant approved earlier this month by the Riverside Township Board of Trustees, the Riverside Community Garden is growing.
The total area of the expansion, about 300 square feet, will roughly double the size of the existing garden. Nearly half the funds will be used to purchase 32-inch-high metal Ve go Garden modular raised beds, which will increase the garden’s ve getable growing area by about 100 square feet.
There will be a walking path se parating the new beds from each other as well as the existing ones, which are made of wood and are much lower to the ground
“The new ones are significantly higher and can be worked on without crouching or bending over,” said Elaine Ruggless, president of the Riverside Community Garden. “We have a lot of senior citizen volunteers, and this is going to make it more accessible for people to work in the garden.”
Grant funds will also go toward continued operation of the garden, from buying topsoil, starter plants, organic soil amendments and other supplies to helping fund distribution of the garden’s produce and maintaining the beds and new pollinator garden.
Yet other funds will be put toward continuing and expanding the garden’s community programming, like gardening-related classes, storytime sessions in par tnership with the Riverside Public Library and yoga events.
Finally, some of the fund will also go toward re plenishing the garden’s Little Free Seed Library – like the ones
traditionally made for books but stocked instead with seed packets
“In the summer you can visit the seed library, literally open the door and pick what you want,” Ruggless said.
The Riverside Community Garden has benefited from donations from companies like Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds and Renee’s Garden, but the seed library is also stocked with seeds collected by the volunteers themselves, from their own home gardens.
Through its dif ferent initiatives – from providing produce to those in need to family programming and other events – Ruggless estimated that 700 people from Riverside Township benefited from the Riverside Community Gar den in 2022.
While not all of those benefiting derived produce from the garden, the nonprofit provided produce for 125 meals as par t of Ascension Lutheran Church’s Meals Do Matter initiative and provided fresh produce to the 5th Sunday Project, a joint venture between Ascension and Compassion United Methodist Church in Brookfield, which oper ates its own garden.
The garden has also provided fresh produce to the Riverside Presbyterian Church’s food pantry and to the Riverside Area Refugee Resettlement program in partnership
with Ascension and Riverside Presbyterian churches
This year, the Riverside Community Garden be gan a composting education initiative that included purchasing vermicomposting Subpods funded via a grant from Microsoft. Volunteers buried six of the box-like Subpods filled with red wiggly wor ms into each raised bed this spring and then held a series of classes for those wishing to tend the compost pods by filling them with food waste and brown material.
The garden’s two compost managers, Cour tney Greve Hack and Deb Faletti monitored the Subpods during the summer By the end of the growing season, said Ruggless, some 3,000 pounds of food waste otherwise destined for the landfills were processed into compost.
Part of the composting push was to convince home gardeners to be gin composting themselves.
“As a result of the program we heard from numerous people who have installed subpods in their own gardens,” Ruggless said.
The garden is always looking for volunteers. It also publishes a newsletter. You can sign up for the newsletter by visiting the website at riverside-community-garden. mailchimpsites.com and clicking the “contact” link. They are also on Facebook and Insta gram.
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from the
Stewards of the land and Olmsted’s Plan
As 2022 comes to a close and Holiday celebrations begin, we reflect on another great year of landscape workdays, walking tours, presentations, Olmsted 200 events, the Student Poetry Contest, the 4th of July Parade, vintage baseball game, HopStop, support of Scout projects/ecology clubs/the Library’s Olmsted Collection, & donations made to Tributes & Trees. Sincere thanks to all planners, volunteers, participants, members, and donors. You made this a memorable year!
Happy Thanksgiving!
Visit olmstedsociety.org or facebook.com/RiversideFLOS for details
from page 1
“There’s a lot to be proud of but there are also areas of improvement that I’m work ing on with my team,” RBHS Principal Hector Freytas said at the Nov. 15 meeting of the RBHS District 208 Board of Education.
Twenty-eight percent of LTHS students and 19 percent of RBHS students were considered chronically absent last year, a high number likely influenced by the COVID-19 pandemic.
According to the school re port card, 48.9 percent of RBHS met or exceeded state standards in English Language Arts (ELA) based on their performance on the state mandated SAT exam last spring.
in ELA and 54 points higher in math, ac cording to the school re port card. White students scored, on average, 26 points higher than Hispanic students in math. White students scored 28 points higher than Hispanic students in ELA.
RBHS students from low-income families scored, on average, 25 points lower in ELA than their better of f peers in ELA and 24 points lower in math.
Some 62 percent of white RBHS demonstrated proficiency in ELA compared to 34 percent of Hispanic students and just 15.4 percent of Black students. Just 28.6 percent of low-income RBHS students demonstrat ed proficiency in ELA.
In math 65.7 percent of white RBHS students demonstrated proficiency in math compared to 38.5 percent of their Hispanic classmates and just 10.5 percent of Black students.
According to the state record card 49.9 percent of RBHS students last year were white, 39.3 percent Hispanic, 5.4 percent Black, 3.1 percent mixed race, and 2 percent were Asian.
At LTHS 49 percent of students met or exceeded state standards in ELA and 53 percent did so in math.
Now safely moving new residents to our small, wooded campus.
Now safely moving new residents to our small, wooded campus.
Now safely moving new residents to our small, wooded campus.
That’s a slight improvement from last year when just 45.5 percent met or exceeded the state ELA standard. This past school year 2.2 percent fewer RBHS students exceeded the ELA standard (17.4 percent in 2021 compared to 15.2 in 2022), but 5.6 percent more RBHS students met the standard this year.
TOStudents need an SAT reading and writing score of 580 or higher to meet the state standard. This year 15.2 percent of RBHS students exceeded that ELA standard, while 33.7 percent met the standard, 38 percent approached the standard and 13.1 percent partially met (the lowest category) the ELA standard.
There were also wide performance gaps between different student subgroups at LTHS. Fifty-nine percent of white students at LTHS met or exceeded state standards in ELA compared to 26.7 percent of Hispanic LTHS and only 6.1 percent of Black students.
Choosing a community you can trust has never been more difficult.
Choosing a community you can trust has never been more important.
Choosing a community you can trust has never been more difficult.
Our community has an impeccable record of safety during the COVID-19 crisis and we will stop at nothing to make sure it continues.
Our community has an impeccable record of safety during the COVID-19 crisis and we will stop at nothing to make sure it continues.
Our community has an impeccable record of safety during the COVID-19 crisis and we will stop at nothing to make sure it continues.
We would be honored for your family to be part of ours.
We would be honored for your family to be part of ours.
We would be honored for your family to be part of ours.
ELA performance has markedly worsened since 2017, when 57.8 percent of RBHS juniors met or exceeded the state standard.
Math was an area of improvement at RBHS this past year. Fifty-two percent of RBHS students met (40.9 percent) or exceeded (11.1 percent) the math standard (also a 540 SAT score) this year compared to just 43.5 percent in 2021.
In addition, 22.4 percent of RBHS students scored in the lowest category in math this year compared to 27.4 percent last year.
Once again there was a large gap in the performance of Black and white students at RBHS and a smaller but still significant difference in the performance of white and Hispanic students
White RBHS students scored, on average, 45 points higher than Black students
In math 63.5 percent of white LTHS students met or exceeded the state standards compared to 28.4 percent of Hispanic students and 12.1 percent of Black students. In addition, 69.6 of Asian students met or exceeded the state standard in math at LTHS. White LTHS students scored, on average, 54 points higher than their Black classmates in ELA and 33 points higher than Hispanic LTHS students. In math white LTHS students scored, on average, 52 points higher than their Black classmates and 35 points higher than their Hispanic classmates.
According to the school re port card, 67.6 percent of LTHS students last year were white, 23.8 percent Hispanic, 3.2 percent Black, 2.9 percent mixed race and 2.3 percent Asian.
LTHS students from low-income families scored, on average, 44 points lower than their wealthier classmates in math and 42 points lower in ELA.
“There’s a lot to be proud of but there are also areas of improvement.”
HEC
R FRE YTAS RBHS principal
A safe & smart choice.
A safe & smart choice.
The village of Riverside has filed a lawsuit asking a judge to order a local homeowner to remedy a host of health safety fire safety and building code violations at his property or face fines of $75,000 or more and penalties including vacating premises or demolishing the residenc
The property at issue is 225 Millbridge Road, a two-story, single-family Prairie style home owned by 64-year-old Golba, who has lived there for more than 40 years.
According to the lawsuit, filed in the Cir cuit Court of Cook County on No v. 14, Ri erside police responded to 225 Millbridge Road a total of 122 times between June 2020 and July 2022, for incidents ranging from loud noise complaints and unwanted sub jects to stray dogs, fights, miscellaneous disturbances and medical emergencie Riverside police responded to the address 32 more times from Aug. 23 to Nov. Landmark has lear ned through a public re cords request.
However, police have responded to a host of incidents at the home going back at least a decade.
In 2013, Golba was charged with a felony count of violating an order of protection after he reportedly fell, while intoxicated, on top of his 81-year-old mother during an argument, breaking her hip.
Riverside police in 2019 charged a 43-year old man at the residence with battery after another man accused him of trying to hit him over the head with a garbage can and damaging lawn furniture. The ar restee was ar rested three times that day – twice in Riverside and once in Lyons.
In March 2021, police found Golba unconscious and severely injured from a fall inside his home. He spent two weeks in the hospital, but police determined the injuries were the result of an accident, not an assault.
As a result of the complaints and because the village has not seen an impr ovement in the situation at the home, Riverside Public Safety Director Matthew Buckley on Aug. 22 obtained signed consent for the village to inspect the property, revealing violations from rotting outdoor deck boards, to a dis
BOB UPHUES/Editore v illage of Riverside for the rst time is using an ordinance passed in 2020 as the basis for a lawsuit it has led against a local homeowner whose property has been declared a ‘chronic nuisance. ’ e v illage is asking the court to order compliance or having the homeowner risk heavy nes or even eviction.
connected water heater, exposed electrical wiring, mold and mildew on walls and a non-functioning bathroom. Golba also reportedly acknowledged the presence of bedbugs inside the home
On Sept. 30, after not obtaining a plan of action from Golba to fix the violations, Buckley served Golba with a notice declar ing the home a chronic nuisance, which gave him 10 days to remedy the nuisance or risk the village filing suit to force compli ance.
The lawsuit asks the court to impose a fine of $1,000 per day since Aug. 22 for the house being a chronic nuisance and for fines of $750 per day for each health, fire and building code violation not remedied since Aug. 22.
According to Village Attorney Michael
Marrs, while the lawsuit does include language re garding evicting the home’s inhabitants, prohibiting anyone from using the home as a dwelling for up to a year and even threatening the home’s demolition, that’s not the ultimate goal.
“The endgame is to stop what has essentially become a short-term rental and to address the health and safety violations,” Marrs said. “We’re not trying to tear down the house.”
As of late last week, no hearing date had been set for the case. Once that happens, Marrs said the village will file a motion for a preliminary injunction. Golba told the Landmark he does not have an attorney.
“I’m lost for what I’m supposed to do,” Golba said. “I don’t know what to do at this point.”
Since the death of Golba’s mother, Lillian, in 2019, Robert has invited others to ve with him, some of them ending up as squatters. In an interview with the Land mark last week, Golba said he allowed people to live with him because he is disabled and needs assistance.
“I let them because I wanted help and I have health issues,” Golba said, adding that one of his recent tenants, Caroline O’Brien, was supposed to serve as a care giver.
Golba is named as a defendant in the village’s lawsuit along with O’Brien and other re ported residents of the home, including William S. Bellavia, Harold Labeda, William Liszeo and Frank Rogus.
At the time the Landmark interviewed Golba at his home on Nov. 18, only Bellavia was still living there, he said, though Bellavia was not present at that time.
Golba alle ged to the Landmark that he had been assaulted by people who had lived in his home since his mother’s death, including recently. Riverside police charged O’Brien with domestic battery on the night of Nov. 16 after Golba called police to re port O’Brien had alle gedly struck him.
O’Brien, 45, is on the Illinois State Po lice’s list of state residents convicted of violent crimes against children. When she was 28, O’Brien was convicted of aggravated battery to an infant, according to the Illinois State Police database.
“I’m just so sorry I can’t control other people,” Golba said of the number of times police have had to respond to the property as a result of someone either at the home or a neighbor calling to lodge a complaint.
The lawsuit against Golba and his tenants is a first for the village in attempting a legal remedy to a property it has determined to be a “chronic nuisance.”
Riverside trustees passed the chronic nuisance law in May 2020 to give the village more leverage in getting the owners of problem properties to remedy the issues or face harsh penalties.
The law was pushed at the time by thenPolice Chief Thomas Weitzel for properties where police re peatedly respond without the situation improving. According to the ordinance, the village can declare a property a nuisance if it has been written up at least twice within a 12-month period.
U.S. Army veteran
Daniel Carberry Sr., 62, of Brookfield, died Nov. 14, 2022. Mr. Carberry was a veteran of the U.S. Ar my, serving in the 82nd Airborne Division. He was always a diehard Chicago Cubs fan.
Mr. Carberry was the husband of Nancy Carberry (nee Lipman); the father of Dan (fiancé Meagan Boatright) Carberry Jr.; the brother of Kathy (Al) Makowski, Peter (Pat) Carberry III and Patricia (Bob) Buehler; the brother-in-law of Bill (LeAnn) Lipman and Joyce (Bill) Lietzow; the uncle of many niec es and nephews; and a cousin to many.
A funeral service was held Nov. 19 at Westchester Community Church. Interment was at Mt. Hope Cemetery.
Memorial donations are appreciated to Westchester Community Church, 1840 Westchester Blvd., Westchester, 60154.
. Hitzeman Funeral Home, Brookfield, handled arrangements
Send sympathy or Mass cards to Hitzeman Funeral Home, 9445 31st St., Brookfield, 60513, c/o The Dan Carberry family.
Mary McQuade (nee Pizzo), 94, of Berwyn and for merly of Riverside and North Riverside, died Nov. 16, 2022.
Born March 20, 1928, Ms. McQuade Mary enjoyed traveling, cooking and absolutely loved to sing
She was the mother of Frank (Sue) McQuade, Maureen Far makis and Greg (JoAnne) McQuade; the grandmother of Re becca McQuade, Jordan (Brandon) Cesaroni and the late Christopher Far makis; preceded in death by her siblings, Cosmo, Charlie and Annette Pizzo-Barth; and was the aunt of many nieces and nephews.
Family and friends will be received at the Conboy-Westchester Funeral Home, 10501 W. Cermak Rd., Westchester, on Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2022 from 3 to 8 p.m. A funeral Mass will be celebrated Wednesday, Nov. 23 at 10 a.m. at St. Mary Church, Riverside. Interment is at Mt. Carmel Cemetery, Hillside.
In lieu of flowers, memorials to the American Cancer Society (www.cancer.org) are ap preciated
Arrangements were handled by the Original Kuratko Family, Brian D. Kuratko, director
Dorothy M. Stejskal, 92, a lifelong resi dent of the Hollywood section of Brookfield, died Nov. 10, 2022 in F lorida.
Ms. Stejskal was born June 16, 1930, in Berwyn, and was raised in Brookfield by her parents, Otto and Esther Milas. She lived next door to Joseph F Stejskal Jr from the age of 10 years old, and they be came childhood sweethearts all through grade school and Riverside-Brookfield High School. T hey were married Nov. 28, 1953, and had two children, Patricia A Stejskal and Joseph F Stejskal III.
She worked as a secretary at Fairbanks Morse until Pat was born. She then worked at the village of Brookfield until Joe was born. While raising two children, she volunteered at the Hollywood Presbyterian Church, Cub Scouts, Boy Scouts, PTA and Little League baseball.
Known as “Dot” to anyone close to her, Ms. Stejskal loved and supported the Brookfield Zoo for many years. She was very g enerous in the giving of her time and money to many people and organizations.
She loved to revisit their honeymoon site at Turkey Run State Park in Indiana and vacationed in Saugatuck, Michig an. Dorothy loved f amily gatherings and celebrating any occasion especially if it entailed dining out.
In March of this year, Dorothy and Joe moved to Covenant Village in warm and sunny Plantation, Florida, where Dorothy was able to go outside and enjoy the warm sunshine and participate in outings with Joe by her side.
Ms. Stejskal is survived by her loving husband of 68 years and 11 months, Joseph F Stejskal Jr.: her son, Joseph F. (Mildrey) Stejskal III; her granddaughter, Sara (Ben) Dirks; her great grandchildren Bryson and Piper Dirks; her grandson, Jo seph F. Stejskal IV; her niece, Gwen (Don) McCulloch; and her ne phew, Ter ry Mc Gill, as well as Nancy Eckert and Nancy Cassell.
She was preceded in death by her parents; her brother, Leonard Milas; her daughter, Patricia Stejskal; her brother-inlaw, Arthur Stejskal; her sister-in-law, Alice Stejskal; and her niece, Sharon McGill.
A memorial service in F lorida has been held.
Beginning Fund Balances/ Retained Earnings
$5,632,510 $978,223 $3,601 $110,193 $5,668,983 $973,529 $33,901,128 Revenues 21,441,101 1,289,207 44,514 3,646,316 3,043,535 4,545,720 Expenditures/Expenses (19,169,289) (860,030) (505,987) (184,646) (2,934,901) (2,954,203) (4,367,716) Other Financing Sources 505,066 150,000Other Financing Uses (655,057)
EndingFund Balances/ Retained Earnings $7,249,266 $1,407,400 $2,680 $120,061 $6,380,398 $1,062,861 $34,079,131
MUNICIPAL SALES TAX-6,060,957; NON-HOME RULE SALES TAX-4,433,324; LOCAL USE TAX-279,396; PROPERTY TAX-562,545; PLACES FOR EATING TAX1,149,182; UTILITY TAX-440,273; SIMIPLIFIED MUNICIPAL TELECOMMUNCATIONS TAX-99,933; VIDEO GAMING TAX454,689; INCOME TAX-1,006,666; PERSONAL PROPERTY REPLACEMENT TAX-117,794; CANNABIS EXCISE TAX10,984; LOCAL AMUSEMENT TAX-427,339; LIQUOR LICENSES-240,104; BUSINESS LICENSES-254,495; VEHICLE LICENSES-39,160; BUILDING PERMITS-141,227; CONTRACTOR REGISTRATION-56,250; TELEPHONE FRANCHISE FEE-9,208; CABLE FRANCHISE FEE-102,846; OTHER LICENSES & PERMITS-22,943; STATE AID ROUTE MAINTENANCE-29,914; GRANTS-1,098,362; RECREATION FEES-594,369; AMBULANCE FEES-580,655; FIRE INSPECTIONS-50,295; ELEVATOR INSPECTIONS-24,920; PRESALE INSPECTIONS-49,920; HEALTH INSPECTIONS-24,700; ALARM CONNECTION FEES-33,356; SIGN INSPECTIONS-48,216; PLAN REVIEW FEES-36,702; OTHER CHARGES FOR SERVICES-59,939; CIRCUIT COURT FINES-123,726; PARKING & COMPLIANCE FINES-86,246; LOCAL ORDINANCE FINES-6,700; PHOTO ENFORCEMENT FINES-1,700,359; ADMINISTRATIVE TOW FINES-153,000; LOCAL DEBT RECOVERY COLLECTIONS-79,095; COLLECTIONS-219,568; MISCELLANEOUS FINES-7,035; INVESTMENT INCOME-63,723; REIMBURSEMENTS-94,929; DONATIONS-8.072; MISCELLANEOUS INCOME-9,879; MUNICIPAL MOTOR FUEL TAX-254,392; MOTOR FUEL TAX ALLOTMENTS-265,977; REFUSE FEES-611,399; FOREIGN FIRE INSURANCE TAX-19,170; WATER SALES-3,564,731; STANDPIPE MAINTENANCE FEES40,000; CELL TOWER ANTENNA RENTAL FEES-30,090; INSURANCE CONTRIBUTIONS-2,952,710; PENSION CONTRIBUTIONS-4,545.451; OPERATING TRANSFERGENERAL-505,066
TOTAL REVENUES: $34,106,133
VENDOR SUMMARY:
ADVANCED WEIGHING SYSTEMS-14,150; AHW LLC-5,377; AIR ONE EQUIPMENT, INC.-3,379; AIRGAS USA, LLC-9,250; AJZ-NORTH RIVERSIDE LLC-296,824; ALAN R MEYER-3,923; ALL TRAFFIC SOLUTIONS INC-11,000; ALTORFER INDUSTRIES, INC.-2,560; AMAZON BUSINESS-2,778; AMERICAN EXPRESS-35,802; AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION-2,508; AMERICAN SOCCER COMPANY, INC-5,305; ANDERSON ELEVATOR CO.-3,495; ANDERSON PEST SOLUTIONS-4,024; ANTHONY RAINIERO-12,000; ANTHONY ROOFING, LTD.-15,377; ARTISTIC ENGRAVING-3,795; AT&T-2,707; AXON ENTERPRISE, INC43,031; BEACON SSI INCORPORATED-7,217; BERWYN'S VIOLET FLOWER SHOP-2,965; BONNIE STEPAN-5,606; BROOKFIELD-NORTH RIVERSIDE-1,477,673; BS & A SOFTWARE-10,862; BUDDY BEAR CAR WASH-2,845; BURKE BEVERAGE-2,509; C.O.P.S. & F.I.R.E TESTING SER5,193; CAPERS NORTH AMERICA LLC-7,200; CAPITAL GAINS INCORPORATED-5,373; CCP INDUSTRIES INC.7,485; CHICAGO COMMUNICATIONS-14,230; CHICAGO POLICE DEPARTMENT-3,976; CHICAGO UNIFORM COMPANY-2,632; CHRIS NYBO LLC-14,000; CHRISTMAS NIGHT INC.-4,784; CINTAS CORPORATION-58,369; CINTAS FIRST AID & SAFETY-5,859; CIVICPLUS-8,098; COLLINS, RADJA & HARTWELL, P.C.-3,875; COMCAST-9,730; COMED-55,874; COMMERCIAL TIRE SERVICE-4,014; COMPASS MINERALS-70,332; CORE & MAIN-35,629;
CUMMINS NPOWER, LLC-6,167; DELTA MIDWEST-42,636; DETROIT MACHINE TOOLS-6,059; DIAMOND TOURS, INC.-20,264; DINGES FIRE COMPANY-8,899; DOOR SYSTEMS, INC.-13,463; DOORS DONE RIGHT-4,000; ESO SOLUTIONS-3,029; FACTORY MOTOR PARTS-37,448; FIRST ILLINOIS SYSTEMS, INC-13,046; FIRST STUDENT INC-3,678; FOREST PRINTING-3,969; FREEWAY FORD STERLING-7,724; FULL CIRCLE K9 SOLUTIONS, INC-3,300; FULTON SIREN SERVICES-22,981; GBJ SALES, LLC5,738; GR CONSULTING, LLC-28,000; GRAINGER-10,392; HAGG PRESS-8,413; HEALTH ENDEAVORS SC-5,695; HENRY SCHEIN INC-6,333; HINSDALE NURSERIES-17,484; HOME DEPOT CREDIT SERVICES-10,104; ILLINOIS ALARM SERVICE-7,184; ILLINOIS DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE-5,510; ILLINOIS PUBLIC SAFETY-5,604; IMAGE PLUS-5,155; IMPACT NETWORKING, LLC-4,293; IMRF311,395; IN PARTICULAR, INC.-18,450; INFRASEARCH, INC.-23,980; INTERSTATE POWER SYSTEMS, INC8,747; INVERIS TRAINING SOLUTIONS-3,121; IPBC2,915,382; IRS-1,415,312; ITSAVVY LLC-21,554; J & M FENCE-4,239; J. J. KELLER & ASSOCIATES, INC-3,184; JAMAR TECHNOLOGIES-4,340; JERRY KIDD-23,340; KARLSON GARZA MCQUEARY, LLC-5,281; KEARNS DESIGN GROUP-4,588; K-FIVE HODGKINS, LLC.-9,087; KIESLER'S-6,330; KLF ENTERPRISES-6,000; KONICA MINOLTA PREMIER FINANCE-24,465; KUUSAKOSKI US LLC-5,094; L A FASTENERS INC.-2,509; LAGRANGE PARK ACE HARDWARE-5,604; LAKE GENEVA CRUISE LINE-3,231; LAKESHORE RECYCLING SYSTEMS-642,156; LAKESIDE PRODUCTION SYSTEMS LLC-3,000; LAUTERBACH & AMEN, LLP-25,225; LAWSON PRODUCTS, INC.-15,006; LCW COACH, LLC-3,453; LEAHY-WOLF-8,173; LEHP MANAGEMENT INC-9,010; LEONARD B. CANNATA-15,600; LEXIPOL LLC-17,446; L-K FIRE EXTINGUISHER-2,509; MABAS DIVISION XI-10,000; MACQUEEN EQUIPMENT-24,737; MARILYN MICHALS-8,136; MATER CHRISTI CHURCH-3,805; MEADE ELECTRIC COMPANY, INC.-65,814; MEEKHOF TIRE OF SOUTH HOLLAND-10,308; MESIROW INSURANCE SERVICES, INC-3,640; METRO COLLISION & GARAGE-12,496; MICHELLE COLUCCI-3,447; MICRO FOCUS SOFTWARE, INC-2,655; MIKE'S CONCRETE INC-41,772; MINUTEMAN PRESS OF LYONS-12,182; MITCHELL VAUGHT & TAYLOR-69,726; MONROE TRUCK EQUIPMENT-JOLIET-3,068; MOTOROLA-32,923; MUNICIPAL CODE CORPORATION-6,365; MUNICIPAL INSURANCE COOPERATIV-497,000; MUNICIPAL SYSTEMS, LLC-8,400; NAPA AUTO PARTS-15,492; NICOR GAS-40,332; NORTH AMERICAN RESCUE-2,508; NORTH EAST MULTI-REGIONAL-4,605; NORTHERN ILL. POLICE ALARM SYS-14,440; NORTH-WEST DRAPERY-2,520; NORTHWESTERN CENTER FOR PUBLIC SAFE-4,200; NOVOTNY ENGINEERING-78,523; ODELSON & STERK, LTD-18,915; OFFICE DEPOT-16,890; OZINGA READY MIX CONCRETE, INC.-10,472; PACE SUBURBAN BUS3,000; PARAMEDIC SERVICES OF-534,559; PEERLESS NETWORK-60,061; PETERSON, JOHNSON & MURRAY CHICAGO-58,977; PETTY CASH - PUBLIC WORKS-6,114; PETTY CASH - RECREATION-14,183; PITNEY BOWES INC.-6,785; PNC EQUIPMENT FINANCE, LLC-131,454; PREFERRED PLUMBING, INC.-5,955; PREMIER WORLD DISCOVERY-14,186; PUBLIC SAFETY DIRECT INC5,193; QUICKET SOLUTIONS-20,640; R.C. SYSTEMS INC.-3,125; RAY O'HERRON CO INC.-18,192; RESERVE ACCOUNT-10,000; RICCIO CONSTRUCTION-349,921; ROBERT L. KALLIEN JR., AICP-5,445; RONCO INDUSTRIAL
SUPPLY, CO.-6,081; ROY STROM EXCAVATING & GRADING-3,171; RUNCO OFFICE SUPPLIES & EQUIPMENT-3,152; RUSH TRUCK CENTERS OF ILL2,648; RYAN ZIMMERMAN-3,225; S & M JANITORIAL, INC.-53,420; SAFETYLANE EQUIPMENT CORP-41,316; SAM'S CLUB/GECF-5,357; SANTA'S VILLAGE AT DUNDEE II-3,798; SAWYER FALDUTO ASSET MGMT-18,412; SEGUIN GARDENS & GIFTS-3,525; SHERWIN WILLIAMS CO.-2,848; SIDNEY MCNEAL-4,134; SNAP ON INDUSTRIAL-3,692; ST. MARY CHURCH-3,200; STANDARD EQUIPMENT COMPANY-2,647; STARVED ROCK LODGE-3,690; STATE TREASURER-5,011; STORINO RAMELLO & DURKIN-27,194; STRYKER SALES CORPORATION-17,028; SUBLIME WEAR USA-3,845; TARIQ DANDAN-104,690; TECHNO CONSULTING INC-75,661; TELCOM INNOVATIONS GROUP, LLC-5,133; TERMINAL SUPPLY CO.-3,239; TERRY'S FORD82,516; THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON-861,670; THE EAGLE UNIFORM CO., INC.-6,522; THE LOCKER SHOP8,366; THOMAS J BRESCIA-50,400; THOMPSON ELEVATOR INSPECTION SERV-3,752; THOMSON WEST PAYMENT CENTER-4,887; TRAFFIC CONTROL & PROTECTION-13,268; TRUGREEN-8,882; TWILIGHT PARTY RENTAL, INC-7,745; TYLER TECHNOLOGIES-4,976; UNIQUE PLUMBING CO.4,914; UNITED RADIO COMMUNICATIONS-8,473; UNITED STATES POST OFFICE-6,321; VANTAGEPOINT TRANSFER AGENT-53,756; VERIZON WIRELESS-20,116; VILLAGE OF RIVERSIDE-124,177; VISION SERVICE PLAN-34,646; VS PRINTING SERVICES, LLC-2,758; WARREN OIL CO-113,094; WC3-338,027; WEDNESDAY JOURNAL, INC.-3,992; WEST CENTRAL MUNICIPAL-14,081; WEST COOK COUNTY SOLID WASTE-4,900; WEST SUBURBAN MAJOR CRIMES TASK FOR-2,750; WEST TOWN MECHANICAL-61,960; WIDAMAN SIGN-4,435; WILD GOOSE CHASE-7,490; WINKLER'S TREE SERVICE, INC.-88,575; WIRFS INDUSTRIES, INC.-2,985; WSSRA-53,327; ZARNOTH BRUSH WORKS, INC.-2,766; ZEIGLER FORD NORTH RIVERSIDE-20,782; ZOLL MEDICAL CORPORATION-67,671; ZOOS ARE US, INC-2,554; EXPENSE DISBURSEMENTS UNDER 2,500-225,457
TOTAL VENDORS: $13,189,256
COMPENSATION SUMMARY: PAYROLL: UNDER $25,000
ABALDE, DAVID; ANAYA, ISABEL; ANGELINI, MARIE E; BEREK, GRACE; BERESHEIM, JESSICA; BIANCO, JAMES; BISIULES, NICHOLAS; BISTYAK, DORIS; BOULAHANIS, ERIC; BZDYL, JAMES; BZDYL, PATRICIA; COLIN, CASH; CASHIN, JAMES; CENTORCELLI, ELIZABETH; CENTORCELLI, PAUL; CHIQUITO, ALIANA; CHIQUITO, ALYSSA; CORONADO, JULIA; CUBIE, BERNICE; CUBIE, FREDDIE M; CZAJKA, DEBORAH; DELANGEL, JOSE; DEMAURO, KELLEY; DEMOPOULOS, HARALAMBOS B.; EGAN, SAMUEL; ESPEDIDO, FRANCIS; FARKASCHEK, JOSEPH; FLORES, FERNANDO; FORD, MOIRA; FORD, NORA; FOY, GARRETT; GIAMPIETRO, JAX; GODINEZ, TERESA; GONZALEZ, AMAYA; GONZALEZ, ISRAEL; GRAY, DONNA; GUTIERREZ, ISABELLA; GUTIERREZ, MARITZA; HAMILTON, FIONA; HAMILTON, MIA; HOADLEY, LILLIAN; KASPER, ROBERT; LITAVECZ, MORGAN; LUKWINSKI, ANDREW K; MAHER, BRIDGET; MAHER, MAXWELL; MANCILLA, ITZEL A; MANDEL, MARYBELLE; MCDERMOTT, SEAN; MCDONALD, SAMANTHA; MCKINNEY, ROWAN; MENGONI, JOSEPH; MILLER, TYLER; MULAR, RAYMOND; NAVARRO, ISAAC; NIESLUCHOWSKI, MIKE; O’BREIN, JAKE; O'BRIEN, DELANEY; O'KANE, KIMBERLY; O’KANE, MARGARET; O'KANE, PATRICK; PANZANI, NICO; QUAID,
PATRICK; QUINN, GLEN; QUINN, JENNA; RANIERI, KATHLEEN; RIZZO, JUDITH; ROSALES, SAMANTHA; ROULEAU, BRYANT; SALAMANCA, ABIGAIL; SANDERS, ADAM; SARRO, THERESA; SCARPINITI, ALYSSA; STEWART, SHIRLEY; SUBA, JOHN; SVENTY, GRIFFIN; TACCOLA, MARYLOU; TINTERA, JACK; TITA, JULIA; VERA, GISELLE; VERDAD, SOFIA; WELLS, ADRIANA; WILLIAMS, ELLA; WINKLER, CAMERON L; WINKLER, GRANT
PAYROLL: 25,000.00 TO 49,999.99
ALMAGUER, MARTHA; BEDNARZ, MARYANN; BENNETT JR., RONALD; BENSFIELD, THOMAS; BRAZDA, VIRGINIA; CERNOCK, SUSAN; CLEMENS, WILLIAM; CULAFIC, LAURA; FOSTER, GLORIA; GIOVENCO, TONI E.; GRAY, RICHARD; HERRMANN, DAVID; KROPACEK, GERALDINE; LAWLER; RYAN; MANGANO, MICHAEL; MICHALIK, ANTHONY; MICHALOPULOS, KOULA; MULLIN, ROBERT; O'BRIEN, JULIE; PIERCE, RICHARD; RODRIGUEZ, BRANDON; SAVAGLIO, MEGHAN; SUBA, JOANNE; THOMPSON, LANCE
PAYROLL: 50,000.00 TO 74,999.99
BERESHEIM, WILBERT; COLLIER, NICOLE; COZZONE, MICHELLE; CULAFIC, PETER; DUREC, ELIZABETH; ECK, MICHAEL; ESNER, DEBRA; JANDAK, DONNA; JANOWIAK, ARTHUR; KERKE, MATTHEW; KOVAR, DANIEL; KRSKA, JANET; NICHOLL, AUSTIN; NOVAK, ANTHONY; PEREZ, RUSSELL; SEBEK, RYAN; SINOPOLI, JAMES; URBINATI, RICHARD
PAYROLL: 75,000.000 TO 99,999.99
ALONSO; RUBEN; ATCHISON, TANNER; BELMONTE, SHERRI; BIALAS, JAMES; BIEL, RYAN; CHAMPION, MICHAEL; DESANTIS, ROCCO; DROPKA, MILISSA; DUREC, EDWARD; EHRENBERG, MAEGAN; ERIKSEN, DWAYNE; FERNANDEZ, JOANNE; FOY, PAMELA; GARCIA, CARLOS; GARVEY, SANDRA; GRAHAM, BONNIE; GROSSE, LORI; JENNINGS, JOHN; KOSIK, JEROME; MANGIANTINI, MARISA; NOVOTNY, CATHERINE; O'ROURKE, SANDRA; RAYBURN II, JOHNNY D; RITACCA, ANTHONY; SCHMALZ, FRANK; SCHOEMER, RICHARD; SLAK, ROBERT; SOYER, RICHARD; VUOLO, PATRICIA; ZENGER, JOHN
PAYROLL: 100,000.000 TO 124,999.99
BASEK, BRIAN; BOBO, DION; BUENEMAN, THOMAS; CHIAPPETTA, JAMES; CZERAK, JOSHUA; FIORE, GENNARO; GARCIA, DEBORAH; HICKEY, SCOTT; KOPACH, SCOTT; KRATOCHVIL, GEORGE; KUTT, TIMOTHY; MARTINEK, RAYMOND; MOORE; JAMES; MROZIK, TERESA; NIEMANN, LANE; RANIERI, VINCE; SALVINO, DOMINIC; SZCZESNIAK, THEODORE; TAUER, THOMAS; TERPSTRA, BRIAN; VELAZQUEZ, OSCAR; WEITZEL, PETER; ZAKOSEK, ZACHARY
PAYROLL: 125,000.000 AND OVER
ALLEN JR, ALFRED; BOENZI, COIA, JOSEPH; CHRISTOPHER; DEVINE, CHRISTOPHER; EHRENBERG, CHRISTIAN; GAEDE, DANIEL; JOHNSTON, CHRISTOPHER; JURCEKA, GARY; KOPKA, DAVID; KRIBALES, CHRISTOPHER; MCCARTHY, TERRI; MCDERMOTT, ROBERT; NALBANDIAN, JOHN; PELAYO, RAUL; PINELLI, KYLE; RAJK, DAVID; ROBERSON, THEODORE; ROULEAU, KENNETH; SCARPINITI, SUSAN; TOUNTAS, DIMITRI; VUOLO, SCOTT; WALLEY JR, JON; WEITZEL, ALEX; WILLIAMS, ROBERT; ZDENOVEC, DEREK
TOTAL COMPENSATION: $11,504,889
In 2020, the Riverside Board of Trustees voted to approve a new ordinance, pushed by its police chief at the time, meant to give the village some le gal leverage when it came to addressing properties where police were called re peat edly and which had become neighborhood nuisances
There are thankfully few properties in the village that meet such a description, but no municipality is immune from a nuisance popping up now and again. Many times, such nuisances are temporary.
But longtime, chronic nuisance proper ties do exist and can range from simply unsightly and annoying to a threat to the safety of those living at the property and those around them.
Where that line gets drawn is up to interpretation and a public body seeking extraordinary remedies to private property issues is quite an escalation over the usual local ordinance citation for code violations or minor disorderly conduct of fenses
It’s going to be interesting to see just how the courts will respond to the lawsuit filed last week by Riverside against the owner of a Millbridge Road property, declaring the home there a chronic nuisance and seeking more or less immediate abatement of that nuisance.
The lawsuit asks the judge to force code, health-and-safety and fire-safety compliance within a matter of days or have the homeowner risk being told to vacate the premises for up to a year in order to fix the problems
While that is extraordinary, the lawsuit did not come out of the blue. Police have visited the property more than 150 times in the past two years and dozens of times more prior to that, respond ing to disturbances – some of them violent -- calls to remove unwanted people who have taken up residence there, loud noise complaints, animal problems, etc
This summer in response to an avalanche of police calls to the home over a two-month period, the village reportedly obtained permission from the owner to inspect the home and wrote up a list of property maintenance violations, many of which remain unfixed despite the threat of further village action.
Many might say that the village’s action is long overdue and that there ought to be stiff consequences for property owners who allow their homes to become neighborhood nuisances.
We’ ll see what the court has to say about all this. Often, such property conditions are the result of complicated personal situations – from mental and physical health issues to mobility to simply what most Americans view as the sanctity of their private property rights. The gover nment can’t just go in and kick you out of your home, or at least it’s not supposed to work that way.
Of course, living in a civilized community ought to be a twoway street, so we hope that there is in this case a remedy shor t of the nuclear option spelled out in the lawsuit. It’s a test case, that’s for cer tain.
KOSEY CORNERIrefer to it as the “forgotten holi day” -- you know, Thanksgiving -that day coming after Halloween and before Christmas. I believe it should have its own season, since it does have impor tance when we think of it in ter ms of family, friends and appreciating what we have. Each year it seems to get glossed over by TV advertisers. I was happy to have the political commercials finally over when, wham, there it was -- Christmas. While most of the commercials I’m seeing are not getting me out the door to the store, Husband Joe was ready to put up the Christmas tree until I reminded him that in this house no Christmas stuff goes up until Thanksgiving is over. Look guys, I know the date of Christmas, so stop pushing. It will get done but on my time.
This year I infor med son Michael that Nanny’s (my mother) favorite part of the turkey was the part that went over the fence last. He had never heard that expression so something new this year. Trust me, it was always hers and nobody fought for it.
So Michael will cook, Husband Joe and I will eat, daughter Tina and the Duves will be in F lorida visiting daughter Elena and escaping the cold. Pies are courtesy of Maggie Connelly of Edward Jones Though we won’t be together physically, we will be to gether in hear t and spirit.
This is also the time I tell you my read ers, my friends, how thankful I am of you. You are the reason I do this every week. Bob Uphues and Dan Haley, thanks so much for giving me this oppor tunity. In general, thanks
So, let’s hear it for Thanksgiving. I have finally got to the point where I cook nothing, but I continue to give directions or how Nanny used to make her sweet potatoes, her dressing, and gravy.
Next week I will have some shopping hints for you and where to get some dif ferent things and sup por t local businesses
Friday we can start with Christmas decorations -- we will put up our tree, which we have reduced in size but still holds memorable or naments
As the lone retur ning starter from an outstanding Riverside-Brookfield High School boys basketball team, junior guard Will Gonzalez has seen the for mula for success
“[One key is] getting it done on the defensive end,” Gonzalez said. “We have to all lock in together, rebound, play hard and then just play confident and have fun, and we’ll definitely win a lot more games than people think we will.”
The Bulldogs are deter mined to continue the winning tradition exemplified by last year’s senior-dominated lineup The 23-6 season included winning the Metro Suburban Conference Blue and a third straight regional
title before losing 64-54 in the IHSA Class 4A sectional semifinals to eventual state runner up Whitney Young.
“I think just the culture of our program in the last two decades, we’ve won a lot of games and guys expect to win, guys know what it takes to win and we as a coaching staff are hoping to put them in the position to be suc cessful,” coach Mike Reingruber said.
Last season, the 6-foot-5 Gonzalez aver aged 6.5 points per game and was third on the team with 4 rebounds and 2.3 assists per game. Senior guard Arius Alijosius (6 ppg) saw significant minutes off the bench and
often provided a spark with stellar outside shooting, finishing third on the team with 1.6 threes per game behind a team-high .489 shooting percentage
“They’re the two with the most experience,” Reingruber said. “We’re looking at them to lead us not only in the statistical kind of stuff but also the leadership role because they’ve been there.”
The 6-3 Alijosius, who recently signed with NCAA Division II Winona State, wants to expand his contributions.
“Just being more than a shooter, just making sure I’m scoring at a high, consistent rate and then getting it done on the defensive end,” Alijosius said. “We’ve all got different roles this year. We’re lear ning how to play together.”
The key may be the development of 6-11 senior Stefan Cicic, a transfer from Niles-Notre Dame.
Injured most of the offseason, Cicic began working consistently with his new teammates in the fall. It should create a nice inside-outside combination, especially for
“Obviously Stef is our big man. We can go into the post. Not a lot of teams can guard that,” Gonzalez said. “And being able to push the pace on offense is definitely going to help.”
Seniors Marques Tur ner averaged 1.3 points in 12 games last season and seniors Hunter Ferguson, Rex Dockendorf, Moses Soto and Aidan Her nandez played between 10 and six varsity games Junior newcomers are Max Almeida, Steven Brown, James Espino, Joe Garvey, Ivan Ramos-Olvera, Landon Rivers, Sam Shelven and John Super.
“Arius is one of the best shooters in the state Will is as skilled of a guard that you’ll find so it’s a nice 1-2 punch in the backcourt,” Reingruber said. “Add a big [presence] like Stef and other complementary pieces and I’m real excited about what this season has in store.”
The season begins with the Bulldogs’ annual Bill VandeMerkt Thanksgiving Classic, which concludes Nov. 26 after three pool games
Senior Jackson Niego spent last basketball season often providing energy as the first guard off the bench for an outstanding Lyons Township High School lineup
He’s among many key players with new or expanded roles trying to follow the Lions’ march to the IHSA Class 4A sectional final.
“Last year we had a real solid team, but what a lot of people didn’t see were the bench guys were still very good,” Niego said. “This year you’ll see that, them on the floor and we’ve got great supporting underclassmen.”
Senior Nik Polonowski is the lone full-time
key reserves Niego and forward Graham Smith also were among the five players to appear in all 32 games for the Lions (26-6), who finished second in the West Suburban Conference’s Silver Division at 10-2 to state champion Glenbard West.
The Lions also captured their first regional title since 2018 before losing 67-51 in the sectional finals to eventual state runner-up Whitney Young
The season begins with the annual LTHS Thanksgiving Tour nament, a four team,
round-robin format that concludes Nov. 23. LTHS opened the tour ney on Nov. 21 with an 80-25 win over Fenger
“It seems like there’s a really positive energy within the group and also around the building and within the community,” LTHS coach Tom Sloan said. “I’m hoping that energy continues.”
Polonowski averaged 11.2 points last season, second on the team to graduated allstater Tavari Johnson (Akron), behind a team-best 71 three-pointers. Polonowski also had a team-high 21 blocks and was third in steals (33) and fourth in rebounds (3.1 per game).
“With a couple of those big role players leaving, that’s more opportunities for more people to step up,” Polonowski said. “I think my role as a scorer will increase I think my role as a leader will increase. But I’m ready for it.”
Niego (5.4 ppg, 2.1 rpg, 63 assists) and Smith
(5.7 ppg, 4.7 rpg) were spot starters. Seniors Carter Reid (1.9 ppg, 1.3 rpg) and Connor Carroll saw significant varsity action last year Retur ning seniors Matthew DeSimone, Louis Kaminski, Patrick Kracker and Dylan Nelson will make greater contributions.
Key juniors include Brady Chambers, Liam Taylor, Michael Reilly and Caleb Greer With Chambers verbally committed to Mich igan State for baseball, the Lions have three Division I athletes for three different sports.
Other team members are senior Tim Vlahos and juniors Max Hoffmann, Cameron Hyde, Tyler Kuta, Quinn Mulcrone, Jimmy Pajauskas, Leo Perez and Will Sullivan.
“I think we have good size. We have several guys between 6-4 and 6-6 that are going to be on the floor, kind of interchangeable parts in those positions,” Sloan said. “They’re willing to put the work in on the defensive end so I think we have a good balance of being able to play on the offensive and defensive ends.”
Class specifications are intended to present a descriptive list of the range of duties performed by employees in the class.
Specifications are not intended to reflect all duties performed within the job.
To perform various network/system administration, computer support, and operational activities for the Village including computer system setup, configuration, and testing.
Reports directly to the Information Technology Services Director.
EXAMPLE OF DUTIES:
Essential and other important duties and responsibilities may include, but are not limited to, the following:
Essential duties and responsibilities
1. Ensure that best in class customer service is provided to both internal and external customers and also embrace, support, and promote the Village’s core values, beliefs and culture.
2. Configure, test, and deploy network systems, such as, firewalls, routers, switches, wireless equipment, network servers and storage arrays.
3. Configure, test, and deploy system servers, such as, file, print, Internet, e-mail, database, and application servers.
4. Configure, test, and monitor server and end-user systems for security, such as, user accounts, login scripts, file access privileges, and group policy management.
5. Configure, test, and deploy end-user systems, such as, workstations, laptops, mobile devices, printers, and software.
6. Test, configure, deploy, and support security systems, such as, facility access system, video & audio system.
7. Monitor and auditing of networks, systems, and user activities to ensure security and efficiency of systems. Create scripts and reports of detail activities for regular review.
8. Perform and participate in disaster recovery activities, such as, backup procedures, data recovery, and system recovery planning.
9. Assist end-users with computer problems or queries. Troubleshoot systems as needed and meet with users to analyze specific system needs.
10. Ensure the uniformity, reliability and security of system resources including network, hardware,
software and other forms of systems and data.
11. Prepare, create and update user/technical procedure documentations and provide computer training.
12. Assemble, test, and install network, telecommunication and data equipment and cabling.
13. Participate in research and recommendation of technology solutions.
Other important responsibilities and duties
1. Train users in the area of existing, new or modified computer systems and procedures.
2. Participate in the preparation of various activity reports.
3. Travel and support remote facilities and partner agencies.
4. Operate, administer and manage the Village and Public Safety computer systems, including E-911 center, in-vehicle computer systems.
5. Prepare clear and logical reports and program documentation of procedures, processes, and configurations.
6. Complete projects on a timely and efficient manner.
7. Communicate effectively both orally and in writing.
8. Establish and maintain effective working relationships with those contacted in the course of work.
9. Perform related duties and responsibilities as required.
Knowledge of:
Principals and procedures of computer systems, such as, data communication, hierarchical structure, backups, testing and critical analysis.
Hardware and software configuration of. computers, servers and mobile devices, including computing environment of Windows Server and Desktop OS and applications, Unix/Linux OS, VMware, iOS/Android.
Network protocols, security, configuration and administration, including firewalls, routers, switches and wireless technology.
Cabling and wiring, including CAT5/6, fiber network, telephone, serial communication, termination, and punch-down.
Telecommunications theory and technology, including VoiP, serial communication, wireless protocols, PBX, analog, fax, voicemail and auto-attendant.
Principles and methods of computer programming, coding and testing, including power shell, command scripting, macros, and
VB scripts.
Modern office procedures, methods and computer equipment.
Technical writing, office productivity tools and database packages.
Ability to:
Maintain physical condition appropriate to the performance of assigned duties and responsibilities, which may include the following:
- Walking, standing or sitting for extended periods of time
- Operating assigned equipment
- Lift 50 pounds of equipment, supplies, and materials without assistance
- Working in and around computer equipped vehicles
Maintain effective audio-visual discrimination and perception needed for:
- Making observations
- Communicating with others
- Reading and writing
- Operating assigned equipment and vehicles
Maintain mental capacity allowing for effective interaction and communication with others.
Maintain reasonable and predictable attendance. Work overtime as operations require.
Experience and Training Guidelines
Experience: Three years of network/system administration in the public or private sector, maintaining a minimum of 75 Client Workstation computers. AND Training: Possession of a Bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university with major coursework in computer science or a related field. Certifications in Microsoft Server Administration, Networking, Applications and Cisco Networking.
Possession of a valid Illinois Driver License is required at the time of appointment.
Vaccination against COVID-19 strongly preferred.
Work in a computer environment; sustained posture in a seated position for prolonged periods of time; continuous exposure to computer screens; work in and around computerized vehicles outdoor and garage facility; lifting heavy equipment, communication cabling and wiring into walls and ceilings.
The Village of Oak Park is seeking qualified candidates for the position of Account Clerk II. This position performs a variety of accounting clerical duties involving financial record keeping and/or transactions including accounts payable and receivable and to provide a variety of accounting support to the Development Customer Services Department. Applicants are encouraged to visit the Village of Oak Park’s website http://www.oakpark.us/jobs. First review of applications November 4, 2022.
The Village of Oak Park is seeking qualified candidates for the position of Administrative Assistant in the Public Health Department. This position provides a variety of responsible administrative and analytical functions; records and monitors department budget and fiscal requirements of grant-funded programs; oversight of Accounts Payable process; prepares reports and serves as a resource for computerized office applications. Applicants are encouraged to visit the Village of Oak Park’s website at http://www.oak-park.us/ jobs. Interested and qualified applicants must complete a Village of Oak Park application.
First United Methodist Church of Oak Park 324 N Oak Park Ave, Oak Park
First United Methodist Church is seeking a part-time Assistant Facilities Manager to work the following hours:
- Sunday mornings 8:00 AM to 1:00 PM
- Two Mondays per month from 6:00 PM to 9:30 PM
- Every Wednesday evening from 6:00 PM to 8:30 PM
The position will also cover additional hours for weekdays and occasional weekend hours as needed.
Responsibilities of this position include:
- Opening and closing procedures on Sunday mornings and at the end of other church or guest events.
- Locking and unlocking appropriate doors for each event
- Overseeing the loading and unloading of bulky items through church doors
- Setting up and breaking down tables
- Directing guests to legal parking options
- Providing security for church events
- Contacting emergency medical, police or fire personnel when required
- Ensuring snow removal contractors arrive in time to clean sidewalks, or removing snow on private sidewalks if needed
- Accessing items in storage as needed, such as power strips, proper tape
- Handling minor repairs and contacting the Facilities Manager, Trustees or directly calling contractors when necessary
- On occasion there is some cleaning required of spaces used
This individual must present himself/
River
Qualifications:
90
• Valid Illinois Professional Educator License with an endorsement in School Psychology.
• Prefer at least 5 years of successful educational experience in both general and special education; and at least five years of successful experience in evaluating students, collaborating, and problemsolving with school and District teams.
• Master’s Degree preferred.
Demonstrates knowledge of special education legislation and acts in accordance with those mandates; follows policies and procedures of the District. Develops and implements activities that encourage students to be life-long learners. Identify and assess the learning, development, and needs of individuals and groups, as well as, the environmental factors that affect learning and school success. Uses assessment data about the
students and their environments in developing appropriate interventions and programs. Conducts appropriate individual psychoeducational assessments for children who have or are suspected of having a disability and provides written reports of assessment results.
Participates in all staff conferences of students having received psychological evaluation or reevaluation, including hospital discharge. Provide support to special education personnel including assisting staff with development of functional behavioral analysis and behavior intervention plans, modeling “best practices” and assisting special educators with instructional practices.
For a complete list of duties, please visit our website at https://www.district90.org/about/ employment
Interested candidates should complete the online application available at www.district90.org.
Clean, safe, fun work with graphic display frames that you’ll see in Wal-Marts, Verizon stores, CTA stations, all over US. No weekends, no evening hours, great pay and benefits.
Top rated firm, Alpina
herself to the public in a professional manner as a representative of our church.
May fill in when needed for the Facilities Manager or the Custodian This position reports to the Facilities Manager, Trustees or the Pastor as needed. Must be willing to serve on rotation for emergency response from our Burglar system or the Fire Department.
Successful completion of background checks must be completed prior to work. Covid vaccinations are required.
Pay - $20 an hour. Resumes can be sent to LKMasters47@gmail.com.
WANTED SPOTLESS CARWASH at 7343 Roosevelt and 7802 Madison St in Forest Park is in need of an attendant. We are looking for someone who likes to be outside and is friendly and likes people.
The duties are to meet and greet customers, make change, sell tokens, automatic and self serve wash instructions, keep the lot, equipment room, and perimeter clean.
Pay is $13.00 per hour to start. The hours an attendant is on duty are 9 – 11 and 12 – 5 on weekdays, 9 – 11 and 11:30 – 4 on Saturday and Sunday. Looking for Wednesday through Sunday. If you are mechanically inclined please mention it.
Please come to 7343 Roosevelt Rd. in Forest Park to pick up an application. 708-771-2945.
Thank you
The Village of Oak Park is seeking qualified candidates for the position of Parking Enforcement Officer in the Police Department Field Services Division. This position will perform a variety of duties and responsibilities involved in the enforcement of Village parking regulations; and to provide general information and assistance to the public. Applicants are encouraged to visit the Village of Oak Park’s website http://www.oak-park.us/. Interested and qualified applicants must complete a Village of Oak Park application.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice is hereby given, pursuant to “An Act in relation to the use of an Assumed Business Name in the conduct or transaction of Business in the State,” as amended, that a certification was registered by the undersigned with the County Clerk of Cook County. Registration Number: Y22009778 on October 25, 2022 Under the Assumed Business Name of SP TECH with the business located at: 1020 N DES PLAINES AVE SUITE 410, FOREST PARK, IL 60130. The true and real full name(s) and residence address of the owner(s)/partner(s) is: DELONDON C HAWTHORNE 1020 N DES PLAINES AVE SUITE 410, FOREST PARK, IL 60130
Published in Forest Park Review November 9, 16, 23, 2022
PUBLIC NOTICE OF COURT DATE FOR REQUEST FOR NAME CHANGE
STATE OF ILLINOIS, CIRCUIT COURT COOK COUNTY.
Request of Olivia Rose Reynolds Case Number 2022CON001315
There will be a court date on my Request to change my name from: Olivia Rose Reynolds to the new name of: Oliver Winchester Reynolds.
The court date will be held: On December 19, 2022 at 9am via Zoom at 50 W. Washington Street, Chicago, Cook County, Meeting ID: 96525616475 Password: 553663.
Published in Wednesday Journal November 16, 23, 30, 2022
Notice is hereby given, pursuant to “An Act in relation to the use of an Assumed Business Name in the conduct or transaction of Business in the State,” as amended, that a certification was registered by the undersigned with the County Clerk of Cook County. Registration Number: Y22009829 on November 7, 2022
Under the Assumed Business Name of WRITE 2 READ RIGHT with the business located at: 5931 WEST MIDWAY PARK UNIT 2E, CHICAGO, IL 60644. The true and real full name(s) and residence address of the owner(s)/partner(s) is: MICHOL MARLENE WHITNEY 5931 WEST MIDWAY PARK UNIT 2E CHICAGO, IL 60644, USA.
Published in Wednesday Journal November 16, 23, 30, 2022
THE LAW OFFICE OF LINDA EPSTEIN
Attorney for Petitioner 722 W. Diversey Parkway, Ste. 101B Chicago, IL 60614
STATE OF ILLINOIS, COUNTY OF COOK, ss Circuit Court of Cook County, County Department, Domestic Relations Division In re the Marriage of: Laura Gonzalez, Petitioner, and Noe Ayala, Respondent, Case No. 2021 D 005047.
The
Now, therefore, unless you, the said Respondent file your Appearance and Response electronically to said Petition with the Office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois, on or before December 14, 2022 default may be entered against you at any time after that day, and a Judgment for Dissolution of Marriage Entered in accordance with the prayer of said Petition.
IRIS Y. MARTINEZ, Clerk. November 16, November 23, and November 30, 2022.
Published in Wednesday Journal November 16, 23, 30, 2022
SUMMONS (Family Law)
CITACIÓN (Derecho familiar)
CASE NUMBER (NÚMERO DE CASO): HF22130927
NOTICE TO RESPONDENT (Name): AVISO AL DEMANDADO (Nombre): ANGELO C GALLARDO
You have been sued. Read the information below and on the next page.
Lo han demandado. Lea la información a continuación y en la página siguiente.
Petitioner’s name is: Nombre del demandante: MERCEDITA M. GALLARDO
You have 30 calendar days after this Summons and Petition are served on you to file a Response (form FL-120) at the court and have a copy served on the petitioner. A letter, phone call, or court appearance will not protect you.
If you do not file your Response on time, the court may make orders affecting your marriage or domestic partnership, your property, and custody of your children. You may be ordered to pay support and attorney fees and costs.
For legal advice, contact a lawyer immediately. Get help finding a lawyer at the California Courts Online SelfHelp Center (www.courts.ca.gov/ selfhelp), at the
California Legal Services website (www.lawhelpca.org), or by contacting your local county bar association.
Tiene 30 días de calendario después de haber recibido la entrega legal de esta Citación y Petición para presentar una Respuesta (formulario FL-120) ante la corte y efectuar la entrega legal de una copia al demandante. Una carta o llamada telefónica o una audiencia de la corte no basta para protegerlo.
Si no presenta su Respuesta a tiempo, la corte puede dar órdenes que afecten su matrimonio o pareja de hecho, sus bienes y la custodia de sus hijos. La corte también le puede ordenar que pague manutención, y honorarios y costos legales.
Para asesoramiento legal, póngase en contacto de inmediato con un abogado. Puede obtener información para encontrar un abogado en el Centro de Ayuda de las Cortes de California (www.sucorte.ca.gov), en el sitio web de los Servicios Legales de California (www.lawhelpca.org) o poniéndose en contacto con el colegio de abogados de su condado.
ARE ON PAGE 2: These restraining
orders are effective against both spouses or domestic partners until the petition is dismissed, a judgment is entered, or the court makes further orders. They are enforceable anywhere in California by any law enforcement officer who has received or seen a copy of them.
AVISO—LAS ÓRDENES DE RESTRICCIÓN SE ENCUENTRAN EN LA PÁGINA 2: Las órdenes de restricción están en vigencia en cuanto a ambos cónyuges o miembros de la pareja de hecho hasta que se despida la petición, se emita un fallo o la corte dé otras órdenes. Cualquier agencia del orden público que haya recibido o visto una copia de estas órdenes puede hacerlas acatar en cualquier lugar de California.
FEE WAIVER: If you cannot pay the filing fee, ask the clerk for a fee waiver form. The court may order you to pay back all or part of the fees and costs that the court waived for you or the other party.
EXENCIÓN DE CUOTAS: Si no puede pagar la cuota de presentación, pida al secretario un formulario de exención de cuotas. La corte puede ordenar que usted pague, ya sea en parte o por completo, las cuotas y costos de la corte previamente exentos a petición de usted o de la otra parte.
1. The name and address of the court are (El nombre y dirección de la corte son): SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, 24405 AMADOR STREET, HAYWARD, CA 94544 - FAMILY LAW DIVISION
2. The name, address, and telephone number of the petitioner’s attorney, or the petitioner without an attorney, are: (El nombre, dirección y número de teléfono del abogado del demandante, o del demandante si no tiene abogado, son): SATNESH S. PRASAD, 607 LONGWOOD AVE., HAYWARD, CA 94541
Date (Fecha): OCT 21, 2022
CHAD FINKE, Clerk, by (Secretario, por) SARAH GOUVEIA, Deputy (Asistente)
Published in the Wednesday Journal November 23, 30, December 7, 14, 2022
Cellco Partnership and its controlled affiliates doing business as Verizon Wireless (Verizon Wireless) is proposing to build a 34-ft wood telecommunications facility in the vicinity of 1022 N Harlem Ave, River Forest, Cook County, Illinois 60305. Public comments regarding potential effects from this site on historic properties may be submitted within 30 days from the date of this publication to: Project 6122010448 - JLD c/o EBI Consulting, 6876 Susquehanna Trail South, York, PA 17403, jdavis@ ebiconsulting.com, or at (203) 2316643.
Published in Wednesday Journal November 23, 2022
Park District of Oak Park
218 Madison Street Oak Park, IL 60302
The Park District of Oak Park is accepting proposals for the printing of the 2023- 2024 Brochure Series. Specifications may be obtained at www.pdop.org starting Monday, November 28, 2022. Each proposal must be placed in a sealed envelope marked “Seasonal Brochure –Sealed Bid Enclosed” and addressed to Ann Marie Buczek, and delivered on or before 1:00pm on Friday, December 9, 2022 to Park District of Oak Park, 218 Madison Street, Oak Park, IL, 60302. The Park District encourages qualified minority-owned, locally-owned and woman-owned business enterprises to compete for and participate in the Park District’s supply and service requirements.
For further info contact Ann Marie Buczek at (708)725.2121 or annmarie.buczek@pdop.org.
Published in Wednesday Journal November 23, 2022
Notice is hereby given that the Village of Brookfield will hold a public hearing on December 12, 2022 at 6:30 p.m. in the Edward Barcal Hall located at 8820 Brookfield Avenue, Brookfield, Illinois, to consider vacating portions of the 29th Street unimproved right-of-way, located between Sunnyside Avenue and Prairie Avenue, Brookfield, Cook County, Illinois legally described as follows:
The first beginning at a point along the eastern boundary of Sunnyside Avenue and ending at a point along the western boundary of Vernon Avenue, an area that extends to the north of parcels 1527413024 and 1527413026 33 feet, and the second beginning at a point along the eastern boundary of Vernon Avenue and ending at a point along the western boundary of Prairie Avenue, an area that extends to the north of parcels 1527414001 and 1527414033 33 feet but excludes the 16 foot by 33 foot portion of the 29th Street rightof-way that lies north of the alley between Vernon Avenue and Prairie Avenue.
The public is invited to attend the public hearing and present oral and/ or written comments. Written comments may be provided prior to 4:00 PM on the day of the public hearing to: Village of Brookfield Community Development Department c/o Kate Portillo, 8820 Brookfield Avenue, Brookfield, IL 60513, kportillo@ brookfieldil.gov, or (708) 485-1445. Oral or written testimony may be given during the public hearing.
Individuals with disabilities requiring a reasonable accommodation in order to participate in any meeting should contact the Village of Brookfield at (708) 485-7344 prior to the meeting. Wheelchair access is available through the front (South) entrance of Village Hall. Published in RB Landmark November 23, 2022
Copies of the Bid Documents including plans and specifications will be available starting November 7, 2022. Bidders can download electronic Drawings and Specifications from the BHFX Plan Room, www.bhfxplanroom.com. Printed sets may be ordered and paid for by the contractor.
All bids offered must be accompanied by bid security in the form of certified check or bid bond made payable to the Owner in the amount of not less than ten percent (10%) of the amount of the aggregate of the bid as a guarantee that if the bid is accepted, a contract will be entered into and the performance of the contract properly secured. The successful bidder for the project is required to furnish Performance and Labor and Material Payment Bonds in an amount equal to one hundred percent (100%) of the bid amount, with sureties to be approved by the Owner, and in the form required by the Bidding Documents.
The successful bidder is required to pay the general prevailing wage for work under this Contract as ascertained by the Illinois Department of Labor, and shall submit certified payroll records, in compliance with the Prevailing Wage Act (820 ILCS 130) and the requirements of the Bidding Documents.
A pre-bid meeting will be held on November 15, 2022 at 10:00 AM at Hauser Middle School, 65 Woodside Road, Riverside, IL 60546 in the Hauser Auditorium. Bidders must allow sufficient time to register at the building prior to being permitted to proceed to the meeting location.
Bids will be received until 1:00 PM, December 6, 2022, at the District office at 3440 S. Harlem Ave, Riverside, IL 60546. A public bid opening will take place afterwards at 1:30 PM, December 6, 2022 at the Hauser Middle School, 65 Woodside Road, Riverside, IL 60546 in the Hauser Auditorium.
The Board of Education reserves the right to reject any or all bids or any part thereof.
Published in the RB Landmark November 23, 30, 2022
Park District of Forest Park 7501 Harrison Street Forest Park, Illinois 60130
Popelka Park
The Park District of Forest Park does hereby invite sealed bids for Popelka Park. Work will include removals, earthwork operations, concrete curbs and paving, site furnishings, playground equipment, play surfacing, fencing, sod, planting, and subdrainage.
Project manuals, including bid form and specifications, and construction documents are available after 10:00 A.M. on November 17, 2022, from Accurate Reprographics 2368 Corporate Lane, Suite 100, Naperville, Illinois 60563, 630.428.4433 www. hitchcockplanroom.com
Bidding documents are available to download and print at the non-refundable cost of reproduction. Bids will be accepted at the Park District of Forest Park, 7501 Harrison Street, For-
est Park, Illinois 60130 during regular office hours. All bids must be submitted in a sealed envelope marked with the Contractor’s name and address, and “Bid for Popelka Park,” on the face of the envelope. Bids must be received no later than December 8, 2022, 10:00 AM. Bids will be opened on December 8, 2022, 10:00 AM at the Park District of Forest Park, 7501 Harrison Street, Forest Park, Illinois 60130. All bidders will be required to submit Bid Security in the form of a Bid Bond in the amount of 10% of the Base Bid, payable to the Park District of Forest Park.
The successful bidder, as determined by the Park District of Forest Park, shall be required to pay, and to agree to pay no less than the Prevailing Rate of Wages, pursuant to the Illinois Prevailing Wage Act (820 ILCS 130) for the locality of the Park District of Forest Park (Cook County), to each laborer worker, or mechanic needed or used to complete the work as detailed in the contract to be let.
The successful contractor, and all subcontractors shall be required to submit, to the Park District of Forest Park, certified payrolls no later than the tenth day of each calendar month for the immediately preceding month.
The Park District of Forest Park reserves the right to reject any and all proposals, parts of any and all proposals, or to waive technical errors or omissions in submitted proposals.
No submitted bid may be withdrawn until a period of ninety (90) days after the bid opening date, without written consent of the Park District of Forest Park. The Park District of Forest Park encourages minority business firms to submit bids on this project and the successful contract bidder to utilize minority businesses as subcontractors for supplies, equipment, services, and construction.
Questions should be directed to Bridget Deatrick or Eric Hornig, Hitchcock Design Group (630) 9611787, bdeatrick@hitchcockdesigngroup.Com, or ehornig @hitchccockdesigngroup.com
Published in Forest Park Review November 23, 2022
VILLAGE OF OAK PARK HISTORIC PRESERVATION COMMISSION
HEARING DATE: December 8, 2022
TIME: 7:30 p.m. or as soon there after as the Agenda permits
LOCATION OF HEARING: The Commission will conduct a public hearing remotely with live audio available and optional video. The meeting will be streamed live and archived online for on-demand viewing at www.oak-park.us/com missiontv as well as cablecast on VOP-TV, which is available to Comcast subscribers on channel 6 and ATT U-Verse subscribers on channel 99. The remote public hearing is authorized pursuant to Section 7(e) of the Open Meetings Act. The Village President has de termined that an in-person public hearing is not practical or prudent due to the COVID-19 outbreak during Governor JB Pritzker’s cur rent disaster proclamation. It is also not feasible to have a person present at the public hearing due to public safety concerns related to the COVID-19 outbreak.
All interested persons will be given an opportunity to be heard at the public hearing. Interested persons may provide written evidence, testimony and public comment on the application by email to historicpreservation@oak-park. us or by drop off in the Oak Park Payment Drop Box across from the entrance to Village Hall, 123 Madison Street, Oak Park, Illinois, to be received no later than 5:00 p.m. on December 8, 2022. All written testimony and comments will be distributed to the Historic Preservation Commission and made a part of the official hearing record. Those wishing to provide public testimony at the hearing shall contact the Village’s Urban Planner at historicpreservation@ oak-park.us for instructions on attending the live Zoom meeting by 5:00 PM the day of the hear ing. Interested persons may also
participate in the hearing to cross examine the Petitioner and her witnesses by emailing the crossexamination form to clerk@oakpark.us before 5:00 PM on the day prior to the public hearing to sign up. Individuals who sign up to participate in this manner will receive an email from Village staff with information about how to join the meeting online through Zoom web-conference means or by phone. Questions regarding writ ten testimony or comment can be directed to 708.358.5413 or email to historicpreservation@oak-park. us
PETITIONER: Anastasia Valen tine, 742 North Marion Street, Oak Park, Illinois
REQUEST: The Petitioner seeks approval of a Certificate of Ap propriateness to demolish one residential building located at 742 North Marion Street, Oak Park, Il linois, P.I.N. 16-06-308-027-0000, which is located in the Frank Lloyd Wright-Prairie School of Architec ture Historic District.
A copy of the application is on file and is available for inspection at Village Hall, Development Cus tomer Services Department, 123 Madison Street, Oak Park, Illinois 60302 Monday through Friday be tween 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. The public hearing may be adjourned by the Commission to another date without further notice other than a motion to be entered upon the minutes of the hearing fixing the time and place of the date. The Commission shall issue or deny the Certificate of Appropriateness within fifteen (15) days following completion of the public hearing.
ALL INTERESTED PERSONS ARE INVITED TO BE HEARD OAK PARK HISTORIC PRESERVATION COMMISSION Oak Park, Illinois 60302
The Village of Oak Park will re ceive sealed proposals from qualified drinking water laborato ries at the Public Works Center, 201 South Boulevard, Oak Park, Illinois 60302 Monday through Friday, 7:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. local time until 3:00 p.m. on Fri day, December 9, 2022 for the following:
Village of Oak Park Drinking Water Laboratory Services
Project Number: 23-106
Proposal documents may be ob tained from the Village’s website at http://www.oak-park.us/bid. For questions, please call Public Works at (708) 358-5700 during the above hours.
Published in Wednesday Journal September 7, 2022
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.
e 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.
is 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: 1-800669-9777.
GROWING COMMUNITY MEDIAOur annual Season of Gi project goes back a good long while. Its earliest incar tions matched up with the old Community Chest of Oak Pa and River Forest. And each year wrote about the 17 local social servic agencies which received funds from the Chest.
Always 17. It was a static view of local nonprofits. It took a minor atmospheric disturbance for an agency to be added, or heaven help us, subtracted from the roster. The Boy Scouts fell out of munity Nursing Service merged with an out of town entity.
Ultimately the Community Chest was merge into the Chicago United Way and that was that. The Oak Park River Forest Community F tion gradually came to take on some aspects of the Chest and much more besides.
These days both the foundation and Grow ing Community Media have been in a time of self-examination and greater focus. Our mutual geography has widened to include all of the Greater West Side from Austin through Oak Park and across Proviso Township. And our shared foundational principle is furthering equity.
y this year’s Season of rporates so many very different nonprofits. A varied geography. maller enterprises. Newer efforts. And reflecting the voices of leaders color and youth leaders. eason of Giving’s Joyful Giving g includes listings of more than 50 Greater West Side nonprofits ou to consider as you think about end of year donations
Full disclosure: Growing Community Media, publisher of Wednesday Journal, Forest Park Review, rside-Brookfield Landmark and the Village w a nonprofit, as well. hanks to the Community Foundation for being our long-time sponsor for this project and ush Oak Park Hospital for
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The Power of Voices: Leaders of color
Chicago West Side Music Center B4
The Leaders Network B4
The Nehemiah Community Project B6 Cicero Independiente B9 YEMBA B9
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Youth Voices: Young People Lead ROYAL B11
LGBTQ+ at OPRF B11 Dog park in Forest Park B11
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West Side credit union B12 Inter view with Rev. Acree B12 Life Expectancy B14
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The Joyful Giving Catalog Page B25
Editor and Publisher Dan Haley
Contributing writers Lacey Sikora, Stacey Sheridan, Igor Studenkov, Shanel Romain, Ashley Brown, Francia Garcia Hernandez
Design/Production Manager Andrew Mead
Editorial Design Manager Javier Govea Designer Susan McKelvey
Sales Marketing Representatives Marc Stopeck, Lourdes Nicholls, Kamil Brady
Business and Development Manager Mary Ellen Nelligan
Sales and Digital Development Manager Stacy Coleman
Circulation Manager Jill Wagner
HOW TO REACH US
Growing Community Media
■ Index of organizations Page B38
Last winter, the Oak ParkRiver Forest Community Foundation partnered with the Nova Collective, a women-owned, Black-owned consultancy founded in Oak Park, to conduct a community needs assessment for the west Cook County region. We convened a series of focus groups and conversations centered on racial equity, with the goal of building trust and determining priorities where the Foundation and our broader community could work together to create a more just society. Participants included people who have not historically been invited into such conversations, along with community leaders and frontline sta from grassroots organizations serving those in need.
rough this process, the Foundation sought to understand our communities’ greatest needs, and acknowledge our o en under-celebrated assets. We heard stories of struggle, but also
voices lled with pride and spirit, that despite all odds continue to push forward and challenge deeply rooted systems of inequity. ese valued community members identi ed a number of priorities for building racial equity, represented in the “word cloud” accompanying this story. All of these needs intersect and interrelate in a person’s daily life. is interconnectedness was clearly evident in our conversations with focus group participants, who o en described multiple issues woven together.
e top priorities — as well as data from a broad range of sources that supports these ndings— were published in our Community Voices report, which can be downloaded at oprfcf.org/community-voices.
We view the report as a beginning, a spark to galvanize not just the Foundation and nonpro t sector, but to inspire local government, schools
and the community at large. It contains not just problems but also community generated solutions, and provides a framework for future e orts toward racial equity.
ese solutions are achievable, with your help. Together, we can work to eradicate symptoms of poverty like hunger, homelessness, and health disparities. And together we can build upon the legacy of our progressive region, and address the deep root causes of racial and wealth inequality in order to provide everyone an opportunity to prosper and thrive.
ere’s a role for each and every one of us, and it takes all of us to make a real impact.
Help us ensure the voice of every member of our community is heard by making a donation to the Foundation or to any of the deserving nonpro ts in this special guide.
141 S. Oak Park Ave. Oak Pak, IL 60302 Phone 708 524 8300 • Fax 708 467 9066 by Growing Community Media NFP. © 2022 Growing Community Media NFP.
When Darlene and Howard Sandifer founded the Chicago West Community Music Center (CWCMC) in 1999 it was because they saw what decades of disinvestment in the city’s youth created. Budget cuts in Chicago Public Schools in 1979 led to generations of students not being exposed to education in music and the arts.
Today Darlene is the managing director and Howard the executive director of the CWCMC, which has a mission to enhance families and communities through music. They believe that arts education promotes entrepreneur ship and fosters community development.
Darlene notes, “We started the school be cause it would not only help kids learn music, but it would help them test better, get into higher tier schools and be able to have careers in music.”
The couple started out with 10 violinists, and quickly added more strings, then piano
and harp. Today, they serve children from pre-school to high school and beyond.
The WISH class, or Westside Instructional String and Harp class, starts with children as young as four. Darlene calls the program a family-oriented program, explaining that when children are in their private lessons, a parent sits in. She adds, “The parents are learning too. The parents are the teachers at home.”
The CWCMC offers general classes, private lessons, music theory classes, and a master class that transitions into orchestra. Over the years, Darlene says they have expanded their offerings to meet the interests of youth in the community
She says, “Students in high school might say, ‘I like to make beats.’ They mean they want to make music electronically. We give them a laptop, the software and the controllers.”
The students still are required to lear n music theory because she says it’s important to learn how to read music. This past summer, the class focused on the music of New Orleans
CWCMC also offers a Business of Music class that helps students learn about the busi ness side of music from copyright considerations with sampling to conflict resolution and interviewing skills
The center partners with the Berklee College of Music. Children in classes in Chicago use a Berklee curriculum at the CWCMC and some participate in a six-week summer program at Berklee in Boston. High School students can apply for a four-year scholarship to the college. Darlene says of the partnership, “It’s actually changed lives for these kids.”
The past few years have not all been smooth. Howard says, “Covid was a chal-
lenge, but we made a beautiful transition online. The parents did a really good job of helping their kids stay connected.”
Now that they are back in person, CWCMC is anticipating sharing their music with the community through upcoming concerts on Dec. 8 at the Chicago Cultural Arts Center, where Howard will receive an award for his dedication to music education with children, on Dec. 16 at the Symphony Center to perform before the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, and the teen orchestra and WISH kids re cital will take place on Dec. 17 at the Garfield Park Conservatory. More information about CWCMC can be found at www.cwcmc.org/
The Leaders Network be gan when Rev. Ira Acree, Rev. Marshall Hatch and Rev. Cy Fields, faith leaders from Chicago’s West Side, partnered to help with relief efforts for those impacted by Hurricane Katrina. The movement, which originally was focused on providing relief to those affected by natural disasters and is sues like the Flint, Michigan water crisis, grew to encompass helping Chicago victims of shootings and standing up for victims of police misconduct. A focus on economic and racial social justice quickly followed.
Monthly meetings held on the second Tuesd month at 9:30 a.m. lumbus Park Refectory became a community mainstay residents, community and leaders and special guests on issues that face the community.
In 2017, David Cherry met Acree at the funeral of Bland, and was invited to first meeting of T kept coming back, president of The Leaders Netw According to Cherry, monthly focus on the issues of fascinating to have people involved in
or officials in city, state or counnment come to speak. uests from all walks attendees can ask them questions.”
When Cherry was sworn in an. 2020, he had no idea that d was about to change. thin days of the March 2020 meeting, the Covid-19 pandemic hanging every aspect of thout missing a beat, The Leaders Network transitioned to virtual holding their re gularly sched uled meeting in April 2020.
Cherry notes that during the pandemic, they brought in speakers from then Chicago Public Schools CEO Janice Jackson, to police superintendent David Brown, to
state Senator Don Har mon.
During the pandemic, Cherry says there was an “emphasis on education and health care to provide the latest and best infor mation to our residents.”
Other topics of interest include housing, employment and community develop ment. Though the focus is on community building, Cherry notes that the reverends’ initial vision of providing aid and comfort to those in need continues. He says a particular focus remains the victims of mass shootings, stating “We stand with the vic tims, whether it’s in Highland Park or Gar field Park.”
More information about monthly second Tuesday meetings, becoming a member and the ef for ts of The Leaders Network can be found at leadersnetworkchicago.org/
From allergies to emergencies, from heart disease to diabetes, RUSH Oak Park Hospital is here for your health — providing expert, specialized care in a convenient community setting. RUSH Oak Park is home to more than 100 specialists treating an array of conditions, including the following:
Heart disease
GI problems
Pain management
Chris Chambliss founded The Nehemiah Community Project (TNCP) in Maywood to help young Black men in the community. Chambliss grew up with an intimate knowledge of Maywood through his father’s work there as a pastor and both parents’ work in local livestock, fish and grocery markets serving the community.
His chose to name his community orga nization after the book of Nehemiah in the Bible because he states, “There was a despair that Nehemiah was going through, and I saw that in my own community.”
TNCP utilizes the T.A.C.T. model, which Chambliss says is based on trauma, awareness, capacity and training. A father of six and a grandfather with
a back ground in and psycholo gy, says his ef for ts we for med by an inability to action-based results ing through other communi ty-based organizations.
He took his vision to nect with others to provide the supports he saw missing in the community. Quoting Frederick Douglass, bliss says it’s easier to build strong children than it is to re pair broken men, and he says that broken men in the community did not have a lot of resources.
TNCP is building to focus on three ar eas: returning citizens, or for merly in carcerated individuals; military support for veterans and their f amilies; and En Game a group to empower young men.
TNCP’s flagship progr am is En-Game,
My story begins at the local gas station. The attendant knew me to be homeless and harmless; she didn’t mind that I meandered around the store with my drink, thawing my bones. She merely smiled when I purchased a bottle of Listerine and a pack of cigarettes. “The poor man’s “Rumplemintz” is what I’d jokingly call it. She looked out at me, pensive and remote, then down at me - never down on me, though. I looked up at her and our tear-filled eyes met. I asked if she would call someone for me. An ambulance came shortly thereafter.
Toward the end of my stay in the Emergency Room, the staff asked if I wanted to go home. What home? I said if I did leave, I’d just end up
back there. I pointed out that was the same response I’d had the last time they asked me, just a few days ago. I was stuck.
My counselor gave me a packet of recovery homes to contact. Way Back Inn answered my desperate call– they said, “recovery first, we’ll figure out the fees later.” It was immediately apparent that Way Back Inn was unique. They provided me with the structure and support I needed to grow and succeed. With the help of peer support, therapy, and the months I spent in this residential program, I was transformed into something I never dreamt I could be: a genuinely happy, stable, sober person.
Way Back Inn • 708-345-8422 • waybackinn.org
a safe space for men to gathweek. T he groups meet in person and virtually and provide a safe space for adult men of color to dis uss topics that allow prob lem solving, validation and mation, as well as being here members can dealing with the pressures of life “We needed to try something new,” he says, adding, “There’s just not room for men to talk about themselves, to say, ‘I’m broken. I need help.’ T he pandemic really highlighted and unveiled these issues which had existed all along.”
During the pandemic, Chambliss part nered with his brother in Los Angeles to create Brother to Brother conversations on Insta gram. Members can listen in and
join the conversation, which covers life topics.
TNP also works with challenged youth, helping with therapy and support for young adults and the teachers and adults who work with them. Chambliss says the aim is “trying to collectively come into a space of wholeness.”
T he group’s military support services are a future goal that Chambliss says he wants to make sure they g et right. He found that many members seeking support through the En-Game were connected to the military. “We saw that many of those who gravitated towards this program were veterans. My father was a veteran. I understand the challenges faced by both veterans and their f amilies, so we want to make sure we are intentional about creating these supports.”
More information on The Nehemiah Community Project can be found at thenehemiahcommunityproject.org/
Every day the students at Maywood Fine Arts find their magic! Children enter a safe space that allows them to discover their confidence, creativity, and happiness.
place!
Whether taking classes in dance, tumbling, visual arts, music, drama, or karate, Maywood Fine Arts’ students are able to find their passion. This is indeed, magical!
As Mia was getting fitted for her first ballet shoes, she looked up and said “I can’t believe it’s really happening. I can’t believe I get to take a real ballet class!”
Isabella, one of four children being raised by their grandmother, shared a picture she created in art class. When asked “what favorite place would you like to fly over like a bird,” Bella drew a picture of herself flying over MFA, her favorite
After COVID, Daniel was anxious about returning to his karate classroom, so he stood outside and watched for months. With consistent encouragement from his teacher, he felt the magic that is MFA and was able to open the door and step inside. His mother shared, “This has made him confident, proud of his skills, and able to see the places he might go!”
What happens at MFA is far different than waving a wand – it takes hard work and commitment. For over twenty-five years, Maywood Fine Arts has provided opportunities to children who are too often overlooked and under-resourced. Making these children’s dreams come true is what they’re all about.
See them in action and you too will feel the magic!
Maywood Fine Arts • 708-865-0301• maywoodfinearts.org
Meet Brittany, a community health worker at an independent living facility who began the role following her completion of the Community Health Worker program at Malcolm X College.
Before her experiences in the program, Brittany was working 9-to-5 in various capacities at Northwestern Hospital. With this work, she felt deeply unful lled and without purpose. Yet, an encounter with an Austin Coming Together (ACT) resource table at her daughter’s school dramatically changed the course of Brittany’s professional endeavors and life as a whole.
Upon learning of the Malcolm X College program, Brittany decided to enroll. Knowing that community health had always been an underlying passion, Brittany felt that the program could uniquely challenge her and
elevate her professional expertise by engaging in truly meaningful work.
Today, Brittany works with a variety of individuals by connecting them with available health resources. Utilizing just about every skill obtained in her training, Brittany feels she is living her purpose: Working with people and having a direct, positive impact on their lives.
Brittany is grateful for that random meeting she had with ACT and encourages everyone to seek out ACT’s Austin Community Hub to get connected. “On the outside, ACT doesn’t seem like they have much to o er. On the inside, it’s a whole di erent story. ey welcomed me and showed me a world of opportunities. ey can do it for you too.”
Without this opportunity, Brittany would be underemployed working at the same job, never knowing the heights she could reach.
Mikah is a young mom who personifies New Moms’ core value of “grit.” She had experienced homelessness, a highrisk pregnancy, and the death of her father, but was determined to make a better life for herself and her daughter. She signed up for New Moms and was partnered with a doula and family support specialists who supported her throughout her pregnancy. At seven months pregnant, Mikah signed up for the winter semester of college. Two months later, Mikah gave birth to her daughter, Sophia, and only three days after that, started school.
This summer, Mikah joined New Moms’ Academic Coaching program, which has supported her as a student parent and taught her “employee rights, ways to study,
and financial literacy.” The program has helped her balance work and school, saying without them she would have dropped out to work. Mikah commented, “Having people like New Moms back me up and validate everything is a major thing for me.”
Her goal is to become a therapist, and she is determined to make this dream a reality, not just for her own future, but for her daughter Sophia’s as well. Mikah is excited about “giving my daughter a home and doing something that I’m passionate about and giving back to the community.”
Mikah’s story is a great example of what young families can accomplish when they have reliable support. Join New Moms in this essential work and support young moms as they build the foundations of well-being for their families and communities!
New Moms • 773- 252-3253 • newmoms.org
When
It is a truism that history is all around us. So Oak Park River Forest Museum created a free Black History Bike Tour so everyone can learn about the stories of African American life in Oak Park, from 1905 to today.
Located at 129 Lake St., OPRF Museum has some of these stories currently on display in its exhibit “Open House: The Legacy of Fair Housing” and many others in Suburban Promised Land: The Emerging Black Community in Oak Park, Illinois, 1880-1980, an illustrated, 170-page book published by The Historical Society of Oak Park and River Forest and available in local libraries and at OPRF Museum. New in 2022 is UnvarnishedHistory. org, a collaborative website that allowed the Oak Park story to be told nationally as part of a look at U.S. housing discrimination.
While museum exhibits, books and websites are fantastic places to learn history, experiencing
history where it happens, right in front of homes, schools, and other sites, makes the stories come alive.
“There is a powerful connection with the past when you stand right where history happened,” said Frank Lipo, Executive Director of OPRF Museum.
“Our exhibits, programs, and other activities shed light on important stories and the people who walked the streets before us. And bike tours and walking tours put us right into the story and are a key part of our story-telling.”
The free tour booklet is always available as a pdf at oprfmuseum.org so that bicyclists, motorists and pedestrians can access it from their computer, phone or other device. The bike tour was unveiled during the first official Oak Park Juneteenth celebration on June 19, 2021. But this important history should not be experienced just once a year. Now it is available 24/7.
Oak Park River Forest Museum • 708-848-6755 • oprfmuseum.org
We have the power to build a sustainable future for all When we work together, we can create the world we want to see: Clean water. Clean air. Healthy food. Learn more and join us: oneearthfilmfest.org/members. Save the date for One Earth Film Fest: March 3-12, 2023. Memberships start at $35
more and join us: oneearthfilmfest.org/members.
start at $35
In a town long without a local news source, Cicero now has a bilingual nonprofit digital newsroom launched by a trio of young founders focused on building community in their city and in their primary language.
Cicero Independiente delivers news in a bilingual format to Cicero, where 82.3% of residents speak a language other than English at home.
“We’re not just providing news and up dates about what’s going on; we’re really trying to build community around our news,” said Irene Romulo, one of Cicero Independiente’s three co-founders and its development and community engagement director
To accommodate the needs of its readers, Cicero Independiente reports news in Spanish and English. As its name would suggest,
Cicero Inde erage is Cicero though when able, the outlet covers Berwyn too.
Cicero Independiente was launched in 2019 as a volunteer led independent news outlet. It has since been incorporated as a worker led non-profit with two paid staffers: Romulo and
co-founder April Alonzo, who serves as digital editor
That growth has come with challenges, of course. Not everyone who works with Cicero Independiente comes from a jour nalism background, including Romulo. She started as an organizer. Her introduction to the news world came by way of City Bureau, a Chicago-based non-profit newsroom.
“It wasn’t until I did my reporting fellowship with City Bureau that I started lear ning about journalism and how I could use my organizing skills to really create an organi zation that centers the needs of a bilingual community,” Romulo said.
None of the co-founders had run a business before, either. They worked with a legal clinic to determine an operational structure for Cicero Independiente. In lieu of an executive director, Cicero Independiente has a steering committee composed of its three co-founders and volunteers who have been with the outlet since its launch.
The steering committee is intentional in
planning for the publication’s future by de veloping a sturdy infrastructure on which to grow and to be able to pay people well for their work, while building strong, trust-based relationships in Cicero and Berwyn. Growth for growth’s sake is not the objective.
They are also investing in that future and that of bilingual journalism through Cicero Independiente’s paid reporting fellowship program. Previous fellows from the program’s first cycle in 2020 also serve on the steering committee. This year’s fellows are an intergenerational group made up of Spanish-only speakers and bilingual young people.
Cicero Independiente is the only news outlet specifically dedicated to Cicero, according to Romulo, and they expected gover nment officials would be reluctant to share infor mation. That has proved true and difficult, but the team at Cicero Independiente isn’t put off by the efforts to block transparency.
“We don’t stop doing our reporting,” Ro mulo said. “We just do it even more.”
For many young people, it feels like the odds are stacked against them and because of their age, their feelings and needs are of ten discounted by adults. This does little to help them grow into confident, well-adjusted individuals.
Oak Park non-profit YEMBA Inc. is breaking that cycle.
“We’re all about doing what it takes to ensure that our kids’ dreams are not compro mised,” said Edward Redd, YEMBA founder and executive director
Officially known as the Youth Educa tional Mentorship Basketball Association, YEMBA’s mission is to empower the youth of Oak Park in all aspects of their lives. The mentorship program equips young people with experience, education and exposure –tools that lead to better outcomes not just for themselves, but for their families and communities.
“It’s like planting a seed,” said Redd. “You plant the seed, and you want to see it blossom and grow into something beautiful.”
In the 15 years since its founding, YEMBA has provided mentorship to over 13,000 youths. Many of those youths have become YEMBA mentors themselves, including Oak Park artist Hasani Cannon.
“When he finished his first year [with YEMBA], I gave him his first set of color utensils,” Redd recalled.
Cannon has recently received a bach elor’s in fine arts from the University of Springfield, according to Redd, and contributes the artwork for YEMBA’s annual coffee fundraiser.
YEMBA works within the Oak Park school system, starting with middle schoolers who are transitioning from chil dren into more independent individuals. Adolescence is a pivotal part of a person’s development, but those changes can be difficult and uncomfortable to navigate.
Kids in the program are provided with emotional support on top of mentorship, which helps them to make good decisions.
They are taught such invaluable life skills as financial literacy, leadership and accountability, as well as receive substance abuse education. The non-profit also allows youth to express themselves creative ly and recreationally.
As the middle schoolers move into high school, YEMBA stays with them while they adjust to their new surroundings and
manage the stress of increased academic demands. YEMBA continues to support youth even after high school. Staf f and mentors help to connect recent colle ge graduates and soon-to-be graduates with internship opportunities.
“Our youth are more than capable, more than able,” Redd said. “And that needs to be celebrated.”
Marlene Meraz, a 17-year-old co-founder of ROYAL, says the advocacy group “is my drive. I am so thankful to work with such amazing youth that are a part of the orga nization.”
Revolutionary Oak Park Youth Action League, is a student led group that started in 2018. It advocates for Black and Brown voices and works to make Oak Park, and the rest of
the world, not only a better place for Black and Brown people but for all.
The founders Meraz, Cindy Brito, Jocelyn Meraz, and Antione Ford are all young Black and Brown students. ROYAL started when the youngest members were just in middle school. The group was motivated by the mur der of Trayvon Martin and began by selling hoodies with the phrase “We Are Trayvon.”
The organization meets every week at the Euclid Avenue United Methodist Church and hosts various events such as work shops to enhance Black safety when coming in contact with police officers, as well as rallies and events
Miracle Smith, a 16-year old member of
ROYAL, says the group played a role in po lice resource officers being taken out of Oak Park and River Forest High School. Though the organization is not affiliated with OPRF it continues to make an impact in the community they live in by spreading their voices for ones that can’t.
One of ROYALs current projects in volves a climate action plan that calls for free bikes and protecting water supplies especially so that BIPOC communities have consistent access to fresh water. They stress that though it may not seem directly related to the BIPOC community, according to the Princeton Student Climate Initiative, BIPOC communities are affected by climate
change on a significantly higher level than their white counter parts.
ROYAL has become more than an advo cacy group to its members. It has quickly become a community that supports its members when tragic things happen not only to the BIPOC community but to individuals Sometimes the members of ROYAL just come to meetings to be in a place with people who understand the discrimination and struggles they face on a daily basis.
Meraz says, “ROYAL is one of my biggest accomplishments and we have truly become a family over the years.”
Ashley Brown is a student at OPRF and a contributing reporter for Wednesday Journal.
Frances Berta a 15-year-old sophomore at Oak Park and River Forest High School is president of A Place for All, the school’s club for students of all genders and sexual orientations. They say that APA “provides a space for queer kids in the school to feel themselves in a place that accepts them.”
Many students who attend APA’s weekly meetings are not in a safe enough situation for them to come out to their parents. But with the sup port of their fellow students and the APA sponsors the group becomes a nonjudgmental and friendly place.
OPRF’s APA also welcomes allies with a purpose of offering advocacy and inclusion for people across the LGBTQ+ community
APA meets every Wednesday with a goal of creating a safe space for everyone including allies, but especially people of the LGBTQ+ community who may not feel accepted at home or in some parts of the school.
APA meetings start of f with announcements where opportunities for LGBTQ+ youth are shared with the community. At the last meeting, scholarship opportunities for LGBTQ+ youth and allies were announced. There was also news of an opportunity provided by the Oak Park Public Library allowing youth to get a library card with their preferred name on it
without the need of an adult. After announcements, the club transfers to an activity such as games or crafts that further creates bonds with the people within the club
According to students in APA, OPRF has done a strong job of listening to student voices to create an environment where students feel accepted. APA’s ef for ts are featured in the Dai ly Bulletin the school sends out. And, say APA members, OPRF tries to work with the club to create new opportunities for students. The school, they say, prides itself in the multitude of clubs it provides for students to enhance a better learning environment.
APA has future plans to add guest speakers who will talk about things such as sexual health for queer teens, what it is like to be queer in a religious environment and the fact many queer people are still religious. Also on the list of topics is what it is like being queer in the black community
Remus Bachner a 15-year-old freshman who is a member of APA, says such discussions and openness are not only important for awareness but they said it is important for “people who don’t have a safe space.” Bachner explained they are lucky to have that space at home but it is important to them to have a “queer space just for queer people” where there is no ne ga tivity and hate
In a world where LGBTQ+ youth are still at higher risk for mental health issues and hate crimes it is important, Bachner says, “It’s nice to have a space where there is no censor.”
Ashley Brown is a student at OPRF and a contributing reporter for Wednesday Journal.
As then-fifth grade student Ju liet Harrington looked at the state of Forest Park’s village-owned dog park at 632 Circle Ave., she knew that it could be better than “a boring mud bucket” – and she decided to do something about it.
Harrington wanted to get the play ground equipment dogs could run and climb on. She researched the playg round equipment and found out how much it would cost. With the village’s help, she launched a
fundraiser. It reached the $5,000 goal in July, a month before it was scheduled to end. The playground equipment was delivered at the start of November, and the village expects to have it installed in Spring 2023.
“I hope that it shows that it doesn’t matter about your age, anybody can make a difference,” Harrington said. “I really hope people enjoy driving past the dog park and for those who donated to know that you helped.”
The West Side-based Leaders signed a memorandum of with Great Lakes Credit Union to open branch in Austin.
“This is something that ultimately change the landscape in A Black people would be able their own community without paying so much money or just outright said Rev. Ira Acree, pastor of Bible Church in Austin.
Michelle Collins, a for mer development banker with A Park roots, has been assisting in the ef She said, Great Lakes Credit Union is “great partner” that aligns with the mission and vision of the Leaders N this year, Collins had said the group was in conversations with unions interested in working with the The two groups have signed a memorandum of understanding – the first step – to enter
nto the overall work we do in supporting the community
Collins said the Leaders Network’s goal is to reach a definitive agreement by the end of this year, allowing the credit union to start virtual operations, offering West Side residents and business owners financial services and financial literacy. The brickand-mortar branch could take longer to open, she said.
“If we have the staffing, we could start opening accounts and online banking,” Collins said.
Acree said the Leaders Network is still seeking donations, which will help fund the associated costs of opening the credit union, such as licenses, fees, marketing and outreach. So far, $300,000 has been raised.
“I can’t wait for this to manifest, this is definitely one of the greatest things I’ve ever been a part of,” Acree said. “We’re so close, and I’m so very hopeful about because I think this could possibly be a national model. If it happens in Chicago, why can’t it happen in Detroit, St. Louis and other cities?”
To support the Leaders Network community credit union, visit: https:// givebutter.com/leaders-network-credit-union
CONTAC T: austintalks.org@gmail.com
Ira Acree, pastor of Greater St. John Bible Church in Austin and co-chairman of the Leaders Network, is blunt about what prompted his organization to want to create a credit union on the West Side
“We don’t have any banks that are community-focused,” he said. “Blacks have been unbanked and underbanked, have been redlined against, have just been treated so unfairly by the banking industry. It’s literally criminal how they treat us.”
Acree said there’s a need for a financial institution in the community that can “help small businesses, help people secure loans for homes and give them an alternative to payday loans and other loan sharks.”
The pastor said he’s been in Austin since 1970, after his family moved here from Arkansas in 1967. He’s been pastoring for 33 years.
“I consider myself a civil rights leader,” he said. “I’ve been pastoring for 33 years.”
A credit union, he said, is consistent with the legacy of community-building he wants to leave behind.
“When I took over this church it was only four years old and in a basement in a building in Oak Park,” Acree said.
“My le gacy is when I see so many lives that have been turned around because of being a part of this ministry. It’s quite amazing. When I look around and see someone like Stacy Osidecko who grew up in this church, went away, came back and now she’s teaching school in a neighborhood she grew up in. And she comes here on Sunday as a beacon of hope for other young people to let them know that they can do it. That means a lot.
“Stacy Osidecko is a business owner, she can get loans to buy things that she needs to keep building her business,” Acree said. “Others come to mind who are not homeowners yet, but would like to have their own brick and mortar. At the end of the day we wanted to do something tangible that could impact our community.”
The Nineteenth Century Charitable Association has a reputation for helping people who become part of their network. Pianist Natasha Stojanovska was one of the Association’s presenters for its music program as part of its Monday Enrichment Series and Henry Fogel Presents. Natasha is from Macedonia and was working hard to receive her green card, citizenship and doctorate.
Nineteenth Century was cooperative in providing Natasha employment and important data as she renewed her green card and acquired her citizenship. The association president and music program chair, Diane Moses, encouraged Natasha through her doctorate at Northwestern and attended her graduation in June. “I am so grateful,” Natasha said, “for the organization’s support through this journey.”
On May 8, 2023, Dr. Natasha Stojanovska
will again perform for the Nineteenth Century Charitable Association, in their program Stars at Any Age, where she will partner with young pianists Freya Pang, Claire Rong, and Christian Gerald Esteban for a concert. Monday afternoon and evening programs are open to the public.
Find out more about upcoming events at nineteenthcentury.org.
The Nineteenth Century Charitable Association • 708-386-2729 • nineteenthcentury.org
L’Arche Chicago operates three familysized residential homes where adults with intellectual disabilities live together with staff members who support and assist them. The effect is an environment where each person with disabilities thrives through person-directed, often 1:1 customized support that is tailored to each person’s individual needs and desires. But even more, L’Arche creates an environment where each person, staff and resident, experiences a profound sense of belonging and meaning. Live-in staff member Katie describes it this way: “‘Being present’ is difficult to describe. I didn’t learn to be present in a classroom or online seminar. Instead, sharing presence was revealed to me in a particular way at L’Arche. It’s where I leaned into the ways of the human heart. I learned about the communion of human hearts through receiving a resident’s blessing at the end
of our nightly routines or chatting through our joys and griefs while being careful not to nick my housemate’s face with a razor during a morning shave. Presence in L’Arche meant that I could trust others to hold my limitations with gentleness and extend that same grace without resentment. Presence meant that we could hold our celebrations and sorrows in the same breath and see each other with breathtaking dignity.”
L’Arche seeks to welcome four more adults with disabilities into this unique care model with the construction of a new ADA accessible home.
L’Arche is excited to be firmly planted in South Oak Park and get to know the neighborhood better!
Learn more about this project here: www. larchechicago.org/larcheforlife. See our community in action at hello@larchechicago.org
2learning, giving, and sharing our landmark building.
For over 20 years, L’Arche Chicago has provided high quality care in communityintegrated homes for adults with disabilities in the Oak Park and River Forest area.
L’Arche Chicago is currently in the process of building a new ADA accessible home in South Oak Park that will extend this unique care model to four more adults with disabilities.
Learn more and make an impact here: www.larchechicago.org/larcheforlife
To the healthcare workers and the community activists working on the West Side, the fact that COVID-19 took a harsher toll on Black and Hispanic communities wasn’t a surprise. The healthcare disparities have been documented for years, and the pandemic has only made them worse.
The disparities are particularly evident in Chicago, which has a 10-year gap in life expectancy between Black Chicagoans and non-Black Chicagoans. Suburbs with majority-Black populations also have lower life expectancies, through the differences aren’t quite as stark and not all suburbs fit the pattern. Area healthcare providers have been trying to tackle those issues, and they all agreed that any effort to improve life expec tancy gaps and other health disparities, must invest in the communities and empower resi dents – even if they take different approaches to tackling it.
Lena Hatchett, director of community and university partnerships at the Maywood based Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine, said that one major difference between the city and the suburbs is that there is less access to transportation. The West Side is served by three CTA lines, Oak Park has two and Forest Park has one, but Maywood and other communities further out have buses and the more expensive Metra commuter trains
Maywood is served by multiple Pace buses that feed into the CTA Blue Line, but the ser vice gets more sparse and less frequent further out.
David Ansell, the senior vice president for health equity at Rush University Medical Center, said that, since the start of the pandemic, Chicago’s gap continued to increase to 10 years. More alar mingly, Ansell said, the average age of Black Chicagoans slid below 70 years for the first time
“The COVID hit, and we knew that it would plant its roots in pre-existing fault lines, social fault lines as identified prior to the pandemic, who got to live and who got to die early,” he said. “A lot of people were shocked at the disparate Black and Latinx death rates,
but it’s consistent with what we’ve seen with other pandemics and epidemics.”
Ansell added that some of those deaths weren’t caused by the virus itself. The already higher rates of heart disease, hypertension, infant mortality and homicide increased during the pandemic.
“The good news is that we think that, with the pandemic hopefully under some measure of control – and the pandemic is not over, there are still 300 people dying daily in United States -- maybe life expectancy will bounce back, but we still have a lot of work to do,” he said.
Hatchett offered similar sentiments, saying that disparities “all worsened during CO VID, because they are all problems they were ignoring before COVID.”
Rush is one of the founding members of West Side United, a coalition of mostly West Side-based Chicago health systems, which was for med because the founders determined that closing the life expectancy gap and other health disparities was impossible without ad dressing non-medical factors that affect the
quality of life in the community. Since 2017, WSU member hospitals steered procurement toward West Side businesses, set up job pipe lines in area high schools and issued grants to local businesses and nonprofits.
Rukiya Curvey Johnson, a member of the WSU executive leadership council and Rush’s vice president of community health equity and engagement, said that workforce development was particularly important.
“As the saying goes, health is wealth,” Johnson said. “A lot of time, your ability to access higher wages and jobs that come with health insurance is one of the ways people can improve health.”
WSU members have also hired West Siders as community health workers in order to share health information with city residents and do “social determinates health screening.”
“They ask [patients] about their access to food, do they have a place to live, are they concerned about paying rent, and we can refer them to various services, help them apply for SNAP benefits,” Johnson said. “We also
make referrals, help them connect to other primary care [providers].”
She also said that the history of medical experimentation on African Americans, such as the Tuskegee Experiment syphilis study, as well as doctors not taking Black patients’ concerns seriously, made many patients mistrustful of medical professionals. Building that trust, often from scratch, is an ongoing process
Rush is also part of the Garfield Park Rite to Wellness, a collaborative between West Side churches, healthcare providers and community organizations that tries to figure out the best way to improve health and wellness. Ansell said that it’s trying to do its part to reverse decades of disinvestment with the Sankofa Wellness Village project, which would be made up of three buildings along Madison Street – “The K” business incuba tor at Kostner Avenue; a 60,000-square-foot Sankofa Wellness Village center with a clinic, fitness center and credit union at Kildare Av enue, and a grocery store at 3835 W. Madison St., where an Aldi grocery store was shut-
Black communities in Chicago and the suburbs are less likely to have pharmacies and grocery stores, less likely to have ac cess to clinics and residents are less likely to have health insurance. This means that residents are more likely to rely on an ER for healthcare, and less likely to get regular check-ups, which can exacerbate health is sues that go undetected. Transportation is another issue – on the West Side in partic ular, buses and CTA trains often run less frequently than in other areas, and it’s not unusual for patients to require multiple transfers to reach their local hospitals.
According to the 2021 State of Health for Blacks report prepared by five Black epidemiologists and researchers at the Chicago Department ofPublic Health (CDPH), the life expectancy gap between Black and non-Black Chicagoans increased from 8.3 years to 9.2 years between 2012 and 2017. Although there were a number of reasons for the increase, the authors cited five driving factors: chronic disease, violent crime, infant mortality, infectious disease and opioid overdoses. The report found that 1 in 7 African Americans, or roughly 14% of
Chicago’s Black population, die of causes other than old age, compared to 1 out of 29, or 3.5%, ofnon-Black Chicagoans. And while it wasn’t a top five cause, the report showed that Black mothers were more than twice as likely to die during childbirth than non-Black mothers.
The report found that the top four causes ofdeath were the same for all Chicagoans – heart disease, cancer, accidents and strokes. But Black residents were significantly more likely to get killed or die of diabetes and kidney diseases
The data compiled by the Cook County Department ofPublic Health paints a more complex picture. From 2010 to 2015, Maywood whose populations are 63.3% Black had, life expectancy of74.6 years, while Bellwood, whose population is 72.7% Black, had a 76.2-year life expectancy, and Broadview, which is 73.3% Black, had a 77.7 life expectancy. By comparison, Forest Park, which is 27.6% Black, had a 77.2-year life expectancy, Oak Park, which is 18.4% Black, had 80.3-year life expectancy, and Berkeley, which is 26.1% Black, has a 77.1year life expectancy.
tered in October 2021. He said that the proj ect would cost around $60 million, and Rite to Wellness is applying for the $10 million Chicago Prize, a community grant from the Pritzker Traubert Foundation. The project is currently one ofthe six finalists, and the winners are expected to be announced sometime in December.
Ansell said that, whether Rite to Wellness wins or not, it will have to raise millions, and they are determined to reach that goal.
“We all decided to go into the lowestlife expectancy neighborhood on the West Side and do something about it,” he said. “I believe that, over time, it will reduce that death gap. A lot oftimes, people wring hands [about] what we can do. We have a plan for West Garfield Park We think this plan can work in other Chicago communities as well.”
Hatchett is a co-founder ofProviso Part ners for Health (PP4H), a collaborative simi lar to Rite to Wellness, except with Proviso Township institutions. Their approach is somewhat different. They organize a system of“hubs” that empower residents to improve their lives. For example, they are addressing fresh food scarcity by teaching Proviso youth urban gardening, offer job training and leadership training for aspir ing entrepreneurs to improve economic op
portunities, and offer leadership and community-building training for residents who want to make changes in their communities.
The major component ofPP4H work, is to address the generational trauma caused by slavery and racism and teach people healthier ways to respond to stress and avoid passing the trauma on to the next generation. For example, Hatchett said, trauma can re sult in people not knowing how to raise their children in a nurturing and supportive way, and that affects how those children raise their own children. Breaking the cycle can go a long way.
“If you can change a young person, ages 18 to 24, we’re reversing intergenerational poverty, and the impact ofsystemic racism,” Hatchett said. “They’re going to parent differently, they’re’ going to look at their life differently.”
Johnson said that, given “decades and de cades” ofdisinvestment and structural racism, the changes are bound to take time. The COVID-19 pandemic hasn’t helped. But she said that their work is making an impact, especially when it comes to expanding job opportunities – the key is to keep going.
“You may not see everything right off, but there’s definitely a movement in the right direction to [overcome] some ofthese systemic barriers,” she said.
OPRF Infant Welfare Society believes that a family’s household income shouldn’t impact a child’s health outcomes, and that oral health is vital to overall health. That’s why they continue to invest in and grow their delivery of dental care to children who are uninsured or on Medicaid. Children with severe dental anxiety, behavioral health issues or complex medical conditions require a pediatric dentist who has extra training to support their needs. For families on Medicaid or without insurance, options for this care are very limited. IWS is proud to have a highly experienced dental team that includes pediatric dentists as well as general dentists at their new, larger location at 28 Madison Street in Oak Park. They leverage their dental visits to screen patients
for mental health concerns and can connect them with a social worker. IWS also screens and provides their dental-only patients with measles vaccines they may have missed during the height of the pandemic. They recently restarted their portable dental program in area schools, providing cleanings and health education. Altogether, Infant Welfare Society’s dentalrelated programs reach thousands of children each year, and they are poised to provide more than 8,000 dental visits this year thanks to their recent expansion.
“OPRF Infant Welfare Society is committed to the long-term health and wellness of our patients. We know you are too. Please help us continue this essential work by making a gift this holiday season.”
Byline Bank is dedicated to answering the call to support nonprofit and community organizations, small businesses, and economic development associations in the Oak Park-River Forest area. In 2022, the community bank, which is Illinois’ leading Small Business Administration lender, donated more than $60,000 in sponsorships to over 50 local nonprofit organizations, charitable groups and youth clubs in Oak Park and River Forest. Supporting its monetary contributions, Byline employees also gave over 200 volunteer hours to local organizations.
“There are many organizations in Oak Park and River Forest that are working hard to meet the needs of our neighbors. Giving and helping allows Byline to build stronger connections, especially with the people within our community. It improves relationships, leading everyone to have a better life,” said Susie Goldschmidt, Byline Bank Oak Park-River Forest Market President. “The health, well-being and success of our neighbors, customers and the community at large is at the heart of what we do as a community bank.”
Byline’s support of local organizations includes those working in the fields of food insecurity, educational resources, schools
and learning centers, arts, animal welfare, at-risk children and infants, gender equality, health care, and communities in crisis. Some of the specific initiatives include:
Reducing food insecurity: Byline is actively involved with Beyond Hunger, a nonprofit organization that provides hungerrelief programming and services, providing Community Development grants for operations needs and sponsorship of the annual fall benefit concerts. Goldschmidt also sits on the Beyond Hunger Board of Directors. Additionally, Byline is a sponsor of the Suburban Unity Alliance Community Fridge
located at the Euclid Avenue United Methodist Church.
Promoting equality: Support for organizations such as Women’s Global Education Project and Oak Park Area Lesbian and Gay Association Awards helps our communities thrive and grow.
Caring and education for families, children, infants, and adults with special needs: Organizations such as Opportunity Knocks, Age Options, Infant Welfare, Sarah’s Inn, Hephzibah, Oak Leyden, A Place to Belong, The Learning Center, A House in Austin and many more local organizations have partnered with Byline Bank to serve the community.
Outside of the more traditional avenues of contribution, Byline also accepted the #BettyWhiteChallenge to fundraise for adoptable animals. Held in coordination with the Village of Oak Park’s Betty White Centennial Celebration at Classic Cinemas Lake Theater, the event raised money to help place adoptable animals in the loving care of their forever families. Building thriving communities is at the heart of everything Byline Bank does on a local level. “Our mission is to help the greater Oak Park community learn, grow and prosper by working side-by-side with these critical organizations. We want to make a difference,” added Goldschmidt.
Byline is privileged to be a part of the OPRF community sponsorships and support to the Oak Park and River our commitment to customers and businesses in the
To learn more about our commitment to Oak
Butterflies are magical. They symbolize transformation and rebirth, giving us hope. They help us believe that change and growth are possible in our own lives, and this can be incredibly inspiring, especially to children residing at Hephzibah Home where we regularly use nature as a therapeutic tool for healing. When a local nature enthusiast asked the kids to help care for her swallowtail caterpillars, they jumped at the chance. Much like the children when they first arrive at Hephzibah Home, the creatures are vulnerable and fragile, needing nurturing care, so they can grow and transform. One young boy, Oliver, took to the project, tenderly watching over the caterpillars, ensuring they were safe, protected and healthy. That is exactly what we tell children when they come
to Hephzibah Home – that we’ve got this, they are safe and that healing is possible. Oliver watched them transform into chrysalises, and eventually butterflies that were set free. He learned that all beings possess the power to change, and came to believe that he too, could survive the trauma he had been through. He also learned to have hope. That is what we do best – provide a space for children to heal and recover and be safe from harm.
Here at Hephzibah, we offer child-centered therapies, meeting every child where they are on their healing journey and helping them to progress – to trust and believe that one day they too can fly away stronger than before.
To make a donation, visit www.hephzibahhome.org/donate-now/
The Y is closing the academic achievement gap with programs that improve students’ educational readiness, engagement, and outcomes, while helping scholars grow emotionally and physically, too. Thirdgrade reading skills predict high school graduation.
In partnership with the River Forest School District 90, Power Scholars AcademyTM is a five-week summer program designed to not only tackle summer learning loss in math and reading while fostering physical and social-emotional growth. Scholars receive
strong academic support from local certified teachers through evidence-based curriculum designed to boost math and literacy skills with activities focused on
phonics, writing, and reading. Students are also able to participate in an array of enrichment activities where students will be able to enjoy physical activity, cooking classes, improv/acting classes, Percussion music, and dance!
Through the support of our schools, families, WCY members, community partners, and donors, students have participated in over 240 hours of math and literacy, gaining up to three months of learning. Your support allows Power Scholars AcademyTM to be offered at no cost to families. Invest in our students today and help close the Achievement Gap by donating at www. westcookymca.org/give.
This has been a hard year for local families living on the edge. They are coming to Beyond Hunger’s programs in increasing numbers.
When Shandra moved here with her family for a new job, she had just gotten settled when her position ended abruptly. Her last paycheck went directly to pay for rent and other bills. She wasn’t sure what she was going to do about food: “I visited the pantry right away since I needed the food. To be honest, I was nervous coming for the first time - I’m usually the mom volunteering and taking care of others - but people made me feel so welcome. And the food is terrific! I’ve been able to make so many healthy meals with everything.” Many families like Shandra’s are barely making
ends meet. With increases in gas, utilities, and the costs of groceries, there is little left to manage monthly bills.
The need this year is exponential –Beyond Hunger is tackling rising food costs as more and more community members are picking up food to feed their families. And just as Shandra can’t hold out any longer, Beyond Hunger can’t do this without you. A donation of $75 can provide two months’ worth of fresh and nutritious groceries for a neighbor in crisis—helping them make meals their families love this holiday season.
To donate, visit GoBeyondHunger.org or send checks payable to Beyond Hunger, 848 Lake Street, Oak Park, IL 60301
Beyond Hunger • 708-386-1324 • GoBeyondHunger.org
Since December 31, 1902, the West Cook YMCA has been providing programs and services to address the needs of our community from serving as a refuge for young men, to physical education and housing, to providing childcare and teaching swim lessons to becoming a leader in chronic disease prevention and addressing the Achievement Gap in our students.
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 neighborstransforming 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.
Safety before and after school was a crucial issue in the area surrounding Irving Middle School in Maywood. The Coalition for Spiritual and Public Leadership held listening sessions with young students and parents where they shared that there was constant loitering, suspicious vans circling the school, and fights that were causing the children to feel afraid.
After the listening sessions, CSPL gathered the parents to take action on it. They brought parents together again to share, strategize, and conduct a power analysis and community mapping in order to find a solution. Parents learned to hold strategic meetings with governing officials and the local police chiefs and to collaborate with the school district leadership to get the funding necessary to launch
this community driven project.
After several gatherings and meetings with additional stakeholders, Smart Routes to School was created and launched in September 2019. Within a few months, the positive impact of the program was already evident. Parents and children reported having fights deescalated, loitering reduced, and that the program helped apprehend a suspicious van driver who was soliciting a young girl.
The pandemic created a pause in the program but parents started pushing for the program to be funded again in August of 2021. Parents are working to reimagine the program to address some of the post-pandemic changes and needs that the parents and children share. CSPL looks forward to helping drive community-driven safety solutions that allow our children to thrive.
Coalition for Spiritual and Public Leadership • 708-397-4266 • www.csplaction.org
Like Anita, some women who experience homelessness have been in abusive relationships. After years of living in an unsafe and unstable environment, she was evicted. She had nowhere to go and no one to turn to for help. All she had were a few personal possessions and her car.
For three years, Anita lived in 50 square feet of space in her car through brutal winters and scorching summers. She says, “Homelessness stopped me from doing anything…from living. I felt like I was ready to give up.”
But Anita didn’t give up. Through the City of Chicago’s Expedited Housing Initiative, Anita was connected with Deborah’s Place. Once she was matched with a case manager, she was able
to find an apartment and get everything she needed to make it feel like home. Finally, she had a safe, stable place to sleep at night.
Today, Anita enjoys everyday activities, like cooking and drawing, and is considering going back to school. “Now that I have a place to live, I can do more for myself. Better than I was when I was on the street.”
Deborah’s Place provides women like Anita the key to opening the door to their future, and we can’t do that without your help! Your generous support allows us to provide critical resources to hundreds of women every year, giving them the opportunity to move on from the experience of homelessness.
Deborah’s Place • 708-638-6537• deborahsplace.org
Oak Park’s Book
Bike (nicknamed the Paperback Rider) gives people access to the library outside of the three brick-andmortar buildings. Visits to schools, apartment residences, neighborhood parks, block parties, local businesses, and summer camps happen all around town (weather permitting) each April through October.
The Oak Park Public Library’s bike was originally funded by generous donations to the library’s Fallon Family Fund, a dedicated endowment managed by the Oak Park-River Forest Community Foundation that was established to help deliver cutting-edge initiatives and resources for all of our community’s children. Library staff members who have been trained to safely operate the bike, pedal it to scheduled community events and outreach
locations. The bike’s cargo hold is stocked with relevant materials— cookbooks and gardening manuals at the Farmers’ Market, for example, and children’s books at area park and daycare storytimes.
For a past summer’s block party visit, an Oak Park family requested that Braille books be included for their young son, who is visually impaired. “Having Braille books would enable him to be included in this fun event with our neighbors,” the resident wrote. Happily, the library was able to stock the bike with Braille books, including one on trains and buses—the boy’s favorites—and the family checked out every one.
Learn more about the bike at oppl.org/bike, and more about giving to the library’s endowment funds at oppl.org/give.
Oak Park Public Library • 708-383-8200 • oppl.org
Connecting people to the past enriches their experience of the present. Forest Park’s dense and colorful history is reflected throughout the year in different immersive experiences offered by the Forest Park Historical Society.While historical appreciation can be gained through any of our in-person or virtual cemetery tours, the Historical Society also connects people to the lives, past and present, of ordinary people, local influencers, and even people and voices that have shaped the nation. The society hosts bicycle tours, walking tours, virtual tours and special events, like Haymarket trivia on International May Day.
In addition, the Historical Society collects oral histories from veterans, gives esteem to our black community members and leaders, honors the heritage of Forest Park, and reflects on the women who have made history in town. The Society’s annual Stitching a Community event builds on the Black American tradition of
storytelling through quilting, and has become a vehicle to collectively tell the community story annually. The quilts are displayed at the annual Juneteenth Pool Party held by the Forest Park Park District.Giving voice to voices that are often unheard is one of the priorities of the Historical Society through immersive experiences. Sign up for the monthly newsletter, join a tour or walk, read the weekly Lookback blog in the Forest Park Review and become a member.
Forest Park Historical Society • forestparkhistory.org
TheOakPark-River ForestCommunity Foundationmanages eightendowment fundsfortheOak ParkPublicLibrary. Yourdonationshelp connectpeopleand buildcommunity, educateglobalcitizens, andsustainandrespect sharedcommunity resources. Monetarydonations totheseendowment fundsaretax deductible.Find descriptionsforeach andgiveonline. oppl.org/give
UCP Seguin believes that all people, regardless of ability, deserve to achieve their potential, advance their independence and act as full members of the community. So we stop at nothing to provide life skills training, assistive technology, meaningful employment and a place to call home for people with disabilities, as well as specialized foster care for children.
Our goal: life without limits for people with disabilities.
Malcolm’s 5th-grade teacher recently assigned his class a book report. This could have been a problem for Malcolm and his mom, Maria, because they did not have many books in their home. Fortunately, Maria is a part of one of the organizations with whom Our Future Reads partners. Our Future Reads sent Malcolm’s mom a genre survey through the agency and matched them with age-appropriate books, including, Trapped in a Video Game, a book that fit his interests. Maria recently offered feedback, noting that she and Malcolm’s teacher were so proud of the book report Malcolm put together for the assignment. This is Our Future Reads’ impact.
In the Chicagoland area, 1,000,000 people have low basic literacy skills and 77% of Chicago
Public School 8th graders do not read at a proficient level. In order to address those figures and help those in need of books, Franklin Taylor founded Our Future Reads to focus on providing access to books and increasing literacy rates. They promote literacy by connecting curious readers with the books that interest them. Every day they hear stories–like Maria and Malcolm’s– of people getting excited about reading, because Our Future Reads connects them to books they actually want to read. Our Future Reads prides itself on serving those that may not have the means to buy every book on the shelf, but still would love to read them. They continue to alleviate the low literacy rates in the Chicagoland area. Let the curious be curious!
Our Future Reads • 773-969-9676 • ourfuturereads.com
In 2018, UCP Seguin of Greater Chicago foster parent Marcy received a call about Peter, a 22-month-old child who needed her love, support, and care. When Marcy met Peter for the rst time, he was not walking, talking, or eating...Peter was barely surviving.
e UCP Seguin team leapt into action to support Marcy every step of the way in meeting Peter’s signi cant medical, physical, and developmental needs. e Pediatric Nursing sta ensured the family received training on his nutritional, healthcare, and therapeutic supports; case managers were on-call 24/7 to make sure that Peter had everything he needed to thrive and grow. Peter was also able to maintain a relationship with his biological siblings. Almost four years later, Peter has grown…and ourished.
Peter has a huge personality that lights up the day of everyone he meets, and his vocabulary is, well, out of this world. Peter’s amazing progress is a testament to his fortitude, willpower, and drive to succeed; not to mention the nurturing love, support, advocacy, and encouragement he
receives from Marcy, his extended foster family, and his team from the UCP Seguin Children’s Foster Care program.
UCP Seguin of Greater Chicago’s Friends & Families have come together to o er a $150,000 Matching Challenge – that means any gi you give today will be matched dollar for dollar, up to a total of ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS! You can be a holiday hero for children and adults with disabilities by donating this giving season at ucpseguin.org.
Our Future Reads teams up with other nonprofits to build personal libraries for those that do not have readily available access to books.
- 2,000 individuals and families supported - 8,000 books donated per year - 30,000 books donated to Our Future Reads - 8 partnerships with other nonprofit organizations - Serving the Chicagoland Area since 2021
Seguin UCP Seguin believes that all people, regardless of ability, deserve to achieve their potential, advance their independence and act as full members of the community. So we stop at nothing to provide life skills training, assistive technology, meaningful employment and a place to call home for people with disabilities, as well as specialized foster care for children.
Our goal: life without limits for people with disabilities.
BUILDer
orn in the U.S., Uriel was raised in Mexico. At age 12, he was eager to help his hard working single mother.Spotlight: Uriel, age 20 Uriel
He started working for a local drug cartel, but after four close friends were all murdered, his terrified mother sent Uriel to live with relatives in Chicago. Struggling, he drifted back to gangs and fought in school, where his dean referred him to BUILD, and mentor Felix Jusino.
“Felix really tried to help me,” says Uriel. “He wanted me to understand that what I was doing was not good, and it was going to lead to more drama and violence in my life. But I didn’t listen.”
Uriel’s gang involvement deepened, he survived a gunshot wound, and was arrested on a gun charge. Alone and scared, the only person he could think to call was Felix, who came right away.
Felix helped the family navigate the courts, got Uriel out of prison and into house arrest, and into a steady job. When a short time later Uriel lost his closest friend to gun violence, Felix helped him manage his grief and rage, or “how to CHILL” as he called it. “I realized I couldn’t risk going back to jail and disappointing my family anymore,” Uriel said, “I had to stay focused on the bigger picture for my life.” Felix helped him get a laptop, materials to study for his GED, and to think about a future. “He was consistent in giving me positive things to do. He gave me his word to help me, and he is still doing that today.”
“My experience growing up is what happens when violence is prevalent in your community.”
“There is more than one way we suffer,” says Zaire. In her home, Zaire had two sisters, a mother sick with multiple sclerosis, and a grandmother so scared of the violence outside that she didn’t let the girls leave the house. The strictness and isolation was too much for her older sister, who started running away. Zaire stayed, helping care for the household— without any hope or plans of her own.
The one place she was allowed to go was school, and BUILD was there. One day Zaire took home a flier for BUILD’s spring break art program. “Amazingly, my grandma let me go—because it was just for one week,” she says.
“That week changed my life.” Immersed in art and surrounded by positive peers, Zaire felt she could let go for the first time. “I discovered my own love for art. I learned art could help me process everything going on at home. And most importantly, I found a safe place. A place that became a door to my own future.”
After this experience, Zaire’s grandmother learned to trust BUILD a little more, and Zaire enrolled in other BUILD programs: BUILDing Girls 2 Women, Youth Council, and after the pandemic hit, individual therapy. Those tools helped her stay focused on her own future, without letting the guilt she felt about leaving home keep her from going to college. As she understands now, “my family only wants the best possible future for me.”
BUILD • 773-227-2880 • BuildChicago.org
staff helped
Animal Care League offers 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 1000 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 difference 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.
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. After the pandemic made long-standing inequities even worse, we started addressing growing needs through efforts like the Austin Eats Initiative, a 20+ group focused on strengthening the community’s food access infrastructure.
Learn how Austin is leading efforts to move forward together, and how you can support, at //AustinComingTogether.org/AustinCares
For over 40 years Beyond Hunger has created solutions to end hunger at every stage of life. Our programs now include providing emergency food to families in need, summer meals for kids who lack them when school is out, connecting individuals to valuable benefits like SNAP (“food stamps”), conducting nutrition education and cooking classes to combat chronic illness, and delivering groceries to homebound older adults. Organization-wide we focus on health and nutrition. We provide food that families love, that nourishes and sustains.
To donate, visit GoBeyondHunger.org or send checks payable to Beyond Hunger, 848 Lake Street, Oak Park, IL 60301.
News for the people by the people. Cicero Independiente is a bilingual news organization that investigates underreported issues, elevates stories of people in Cicero and holds the powerful accountable through community-rooted journalism. Donations help us pay local residents so that they can learn journalism skills and report on issues that matter to them. We foster and support civic participation and a sense of belonging in a community that has traditionally been divested in. We’re creating opportunities for more BIPOC storytellers and working collaboratively to make our town a better place to live.
Support community-rooted, bilingual journalism by making a contribution at https://donorbox.org/cicero-independiente.
The Collaboration for Early Childhood turned twenty this year! Thank you for your two-decade-long commitment to striving towards a day where every young child has the care, relationships, and resources needed to thrive and to begin school safe, healthy, and empowered to succeed. We need your support to write the next chapter of our children’s success story. There is so much opportunity for our little ones just over the horizon. Consider setting a recurring donation to keep the good going all year long.
Learn more about our impact and make a donation at www.collab4kids.org.
Since 1969, BUILD has helped Chicago’s most vulnerable youth escape gangs and violence to become positive leaders in their communities. These young people face enormous obstacles and trauma, so we surround them with the counseling, mentoring, training, and opportunities they need to build a future and succeed. We engage youth at every stage, with specialized teams dedicated to street violence interventions, gang detachments, creative after-school programming, academic school and 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. Visit www.buildchicago.org
The Coalition for Spiritual & Public Leadership (CSPL) is a multi-racial, multi-ethnic, multi-generational spiritually-rooted organization that labors to transform racial, economic, social and environmental systemic structures through grassroots coalition building, community organizing, and liberative formation. CSPL is based in Maywood and works with community residents to bring about change and helps incubate worker cooperatives.
To learn more or join our efforts, visit csplaction.org.
Founded in 1864, Concordia University Chicago has equipped students to serve and lead with integrity and compassion. Concordia-Chicago is a Christ-centered Lutheran university where truth, freedom, and vocation form students for lives of influence and service for the common good. Historically a college for teachers, it now offers more than 100 areas of study through traditional, blended or online classes. Students can earn a bachelor’s, master’s or doctoral degrees through one of four colleges: the College of Business, the College of Education, the College of Health, Science & Technology, and the College of Theology, Arts & Humanities.
To learn more, please visit CUChicago.edu or CUChicago.edu/GiveNow to support our
Opportunity Knocks (OK) exists to support young people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, whom they endearingly dub Warriors. This past year, they have welcomed new Warriors who have begun to thrive after finding community at OK. Ron Turner is one such Warrior.
Ron joined programs this past May, coming all the way from Pennsylvania!
After his big move, he and his sister were eager to find a program as robust as his previous one and decided to attend OK. While Ron was a bit reserved the first few weeks, he began to come out of his shell as he got to know his Warrior peers, one Warrior Welcome at a time. Not even a month into programs, there was a visible change in Ron as he had grown comfortable
with the group, presenting the Warrior Welcome and helping out his friends whenever the opportunity arose.
“Ron has since become very lively; he has very strong leadership skills and has the respect of his fellow Warriors,” reflects Netta Williams, Volunteer Coordinator and Program Leader. Ron flourishing in programs is a testament to the community that has been and continues to be built within and around Opportunity Knocks.
Consider a donation this season so that Opportunity Knocks can continue to meet the needs of people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. It is support from the community that grants Warriors the opportunity to discover and amplify their voices and explore the experiences of life without boundaries.
Opportunity Knocks • 708-771-6159 ext. 204 • opportunityknocksnow.org
Four years ago, vacant buildings on the St. Angela School campus were demolished; a sad day for many whose childhoods had included those buildings, but a day of promise for today’s scholars. With the generous help of alumni and other friends, St. Angela has built a campus that is a testament to their belief in the future of the school. They now have a soccer field—and a burgeoning soccer program. St. Angela School is increasingly green, the newest of their trees having been planted by their 8th graders this past fall. They have outdoor classrooms, a beautiful, shaded playground, a four-season prayer garden surrounding the statue of St. Angela that once graced the façade of the church. An engraved brick garden, dedicated to the memory of generations of students and teachers, tells the story of their first one hundred years.
The work on their campus isn’t finished and neither is their work on the old buildings. In October, an artist began covering the south wall of the school with a beautiful, colorful mural that celebrates St. Angela School children. The mural represents the fulfillment of a promise St. Angela School made the Austin community—their neighborhood—when those bulldozers first arrived years ago, “we’re not going anywhere. We are here to stay.”
St. Angela School will continue to serve these children. “We will keep them safe, give them fields to run on, gardens to read in, trees to shade their rest. We are committed to our work, and we are deeply grateful to all those who support it.”
For more information about St. Angela School, their people and their programs, please visit their website: www.saintangela.org.
St. Angela School • 773-626-2655 • saintangela.org
“At Wonder Works, we believe that play is so powerful, it can change lives,” says Wonder Works Executive Director Deborah Clair, “as a child plays, they convey their thoughts and explore emotions that shape their understanding of the world around them.”
Clair joined Wonder Works in February 2022, bringing a wealth of experience with nonprofit organizations that touch youths’ lives. She has a passion for working with children, helping to grow and develop the next generation of 21st century leaders, and is thrilled to have joined the Wonder Works team.
During the pandemic, Wonder Works was closed for 15 months. From her first day, it has been Clair’s mission to bring Wonder Works back to full play and create a safe environment for ALL children.
Clair and her staff worked to increase museum
hours and capacity, add more play materials, reopen the snack room, and add more birthday celebration options. In 2022, Wonder Works hosted several fun events including a dinosaur takeover, an outdoor bubble bash and a tinkering workshop. A new permanent exhibit, featuring big, bright, colorful blocks, will empower young visitors to build and design whatever they imagine. Despite being a community anchor on North Avenue for 20 years, Wonder Works’ attendance is down significantly compared to pre-COVID levels. Donations to Wonder Works will help the museum continue to change the lives of the children of Oak Park, surrounding suburbs and the Chicagoland area through play-based learning.
Make a gift to Wonder Works today at www. wonder-works.org
Wonder Works • 708-383-4815 • wonder-works.org
• Over 100 years of academic excelence with a caring community and rich history
• Over 100 years of academic excelence with a caring community and rich history
• Over 100 years of academic excelence with a caring community and rich history
• Small class sizes and belief in learning to be active citizens and leaders in our community and world
• Small class sizes and belief in learning to be active citizens and leaders in our community and world
• Small class sizes and belief in learning to be active citizens and leaders in our community and world
• Technology for all students PreK-8th grade
• Technology for all students PreK-8th grade
• Technology for all students PreK-8th grade
• Early Childhood Program starting at 3 years old
• Early Childhood Program starting at 3 years old
• Early Childhood Program starting at 3 years old
• Over $700,000 in financial aid awarded each year
• Over $700,000 in financial aid awarded each year
• Over $700,000 in financial aid awarded each year
Saint Angela School 773-626-2655 www.saintangela.org 1332 N Massasoit Ave, Chicago
Saint Angela School 773-626-2655 www.saintangela.org 1332 N Massasoit Ave, Chicago
Saint Angela School 773-626-2655 www.saintangela.org 1332 N Massasoit Ave, Chicago
homelessness are still an underserved population. With donor support, unaccompanied women will achieve their goals and greater self-determination.
To learn more, volunteer, or donate, visit deborahsplace.org, email info@ deborahsplace.org or call 773.722.5080.
The D97 PTO Council and Diversity Council (DIVCO) Angel Fund provides financial support to D97 students, prioritizing students whose families qualify for free or reduced lunch, as well as those who face socioeconomic or cultural barriers, so that all students have a fair chance to participate fully in their school communities. The Angel Fund ensures that all students have a fair opportunity to engage their best selves in academic activities, school events, and traditions, and that they have their essential needs met during the school day. Please donate to be part of our community of care.
Tax deductible donations can be sent via: Lincoln PTO
ATTN: D97 STUDENT ANGEL FUND 1111 S Grove Ave, Oak Park, IL 60304
Since 1912, The Day Nursery has provided exceptional early childhood education in an environment that welcomes all children, enhances individual strengths, and fosters the academic, social-emotional, and physical development that leads to school readiness. You can help lay the foundation today for successful adults tomorrow.
To learn more about us and to donate, visit www.thedaynursery.org
Deborah’s Place has opened doors of opportunity for women who are homeless in Chicago since 1985. Supportive housing offers women the key to healing and moving on from the experience of homelessness. With more than 200 units of housing and over 600 women served yearly, Deborah’s Place is the largest provider of permanent supportive housing in Chicago exclusively for unaccompanied women. After 37 years of service, there is still a great need for Deborah’s Place. Women experiencing
What if YOU were known for the worst thing you’ve ever done? Do you believe in second chances? Defy Ventures Illinois
shifts mindsets to give people with criminal histories their best shot at a second chance. Using entrepreneurship, career readiness, and personal development training programs, Defy Illinois helps currently and formerly incarcerated people defy the odds. Our graduates start businesses, launch careers, better themselves and their communities, and have a less than 10% return-to-prison rate. Defy works with the business community to create economic opportunities, dispel myths about people with criminal histories, and transform lives. Join us!
Find out more about Defy and support us at defyventures.org.
Equity and Transformation’s (EAT) mission is to build social and economic equity for Black workers engaged in the informal economy: the diversified set of economic activities, enterprises, jobs, and workers that are not regulated or protected by the state. Our strategy seeks to empower individuals who
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 mail us at: Ernest Hemingway Foundation of Oak Park, P.O. Box 2222, Oak Park, IL 60303-2222.
The entire Village of Riverside, designed by Frederick Law Olmsted in 1869, is a National Historic Landmark. For over 50 years, the dedicated members and volunteers of the non-profit Olmsted Society of Riverside have strived to preserve, protect, and promote its fascinating history, beautiful landscapes, and
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 Media connects residents through reader-supported journalism--our stories are based in facts, rooted deeply in our neighborhoods and reflective of voices not always heard. Through Austin Weekly News, Wednesday Journal, Forest Park Review, Riverside-Brookfield Landmark and Village Free Press, GCM provides a vital civic service worthy of public support. Our journalists tell compelling stories that strengthen the fabric of our democracy by holding local governments and institutions to account. GCM’s non-profit news sources grow political engagement, create shared culture, and connect community members to businesses and local events. It’s about more than news.
Donate for news that matters to you at growingcommunitymedia.org/donate/
Astrategic goal of the Friends of the Oak Park Conservatory is to expand outreach for their school tour program to underserved communities. Recently, they have been working to fine-tune a new Tour Grant Program that will cover the per-person cost of tours for students coming from public schools in areas that neighbor Oak Park, such as Berwyn and Cicero. The program is now ready to pilot and their first school is registered!
This fall, The Friends will host a group of 5th graders from a public school in Cicero for a guided school tour. Many of their students have never been on a field trip or visited the Oak Park Conservatory. Their teacher is an inspiration, aiming to plan a field trip once a month so her
students can expand their horizons at museums and cultural institutions. The school is not permitted to ask the families for money to cover the cost of these trips, but The Friends’ Tour Grant made their docent-guided tour possible.
The Friends of the Oak Park Conservatory are happy to get this program up and running, as it was on hold for two years due to COVID. “It is deeply satisfying to know we are helping these kids learn about climate, plant life, and geography as they visit the local Oak Park Conservatory,” they say. Their goal is to bring 250 students through the grant program this year, and they are off to a good start!
For more information about tours, volunteer opportunities, supporting The Friends financially, or becoming a member, please visit fopcon.org.
After the unexpected passing of her daughter, Renee Anderson received custody of her two grandchildren and was thrust into early retirement. As a grandmother raising her grandchildren fulltime, Anderson has certainly experienced some challenges; yet, she has found comfort and peace in knowing that she has found a village and support system in her community.
Anderson raises a set of 10-year-old twins, one girl and a boy, Malik. Malik has autism, and presented behavioral challenges for Anderson. She worried about her own ability to help her grandson grow and become independent.
By chance, Anderson became acquainted with The Answer’s Program Coordinator, Dana Bryant, and learned about the programs and services the agency provided.
“At first” Anderson said, “we had to deal with a lot of whining from Malik, and his tone of
voice, he talks so loud. However, I see progress in him since those programs.”
Over time, Anderson began to notice vast improvements with her grandson. He attends The Answer Inc.’s weekly Saturday program, and participates in the Spectrum University tutoring program where he receives help with school assignments and creative projects.
“Saturday programs are very helpful because they give me a bit of a break,” Anderson said. “The only other break I have from parenting is school.”
With the support of The Answer Inc. Anderson says Malik has become more independent with dressing himself, his communication is progressing, and he’s learning better manners and etiquette.
“I hope this program never ends,” said Anderson. “These types of programs help me believe there are people who really do care in our communities.”
The Answer Inc. • 708- 296-5651 • theanswerinc.org
Brenda walked into the domestic violence courthouse to le for an emergency order of protection. When she arrived, she met a Legal Advocate from Sarah’s Inn who assisted her as she lled out paperwork and they explained her legal rights under the law, as well as the legal process in the domestic violence court system. Brenda told the advocate that she and her daughters had been kicked out by her husband because she had gone to her sister’s home without his permission. She shared stories about the physical abuse that had begun when she was pregnant with her third daughter. e advocate replied to her saying, “We understand your situation, we believe you, and we’re going to help you.” Brenda says she felt such relief because “ ose were the words I was waiting for, for many years.”
rough the advocacy and counseling services at Sarah’s Inn, Brenda found the support she needed as she began to heal and create a life she never thought possible for her family. She attended college, found a job she enjoys, and was able to purchase a home for her and her
daughters. roughout all of this, her Sarah’s Inn Advocate has continued to walk with her and stand by her as she navigates her life free of abuse.
Visit sarahsinn.org to hear more about Brenda’s story and to learn about Sarah’s Inn’s programs and services.
Sarah’s Inn • 708-386-4225 • sarahsinn.org
You are not alone, we believe you.
For over 125 years, Hephzibah has served vulnerable children and struggling families. Hephzibah Home, located in the heart of Oak Park, is where children receive intense therapeutic support to heal from extreme abuse and neglect and is the only program in Illinois designated to care for young children ages 3-11. Our Family Based program supports hundreds of foster care children and stabilizes families in crisis in the Chicago metro area. The after school and summer day camp program delivers quality, affordable care for over 500 elementary school children in Oak Park every year.
Change a child’s life with us at hephzibahhome.org
The Historical Society of Forest Park collects, preserves, and shares the rich heritage of Forest Park. Through history we explore the past to understand the present and shape the future. We offer experiences of history through events, displays, and programs. Virtual tours, presentations, and films about Forest Park are found on our website. They include Forest Park Amusement Park, Bloomer Girls, Veteran History, Haymarket Martyrs’ Monument, Cemetery Symbolism, and others. Our members support our mission and our programs including the Garden Walk, Prohibition Event, History Hangouts, bicycle tours, and weekly lookbacks to bring history to the community throughout the year.
Visit ForestParkHistory.org to become a member or to learn more about Forest Park
Housing Forward is passionately focused on one vision – ending homelessness. We believe in bold, comprehensive approaches to prevent homelessness whenever possible, respond to the housing crisis, and
create stability through permanent housing. We offer a coordinated response that allows people experiencing a housing crisis to quickly resolve their situation. We offer comprehensive services including homelessness prevention, outreach and diversion, interim housing, medical respite, housing, and wraparound support. Last year, we served nearly 3,000 individuals and families with personalized support and services. Housing Forward also has programs that specifically address the housing needs of families, youth, and veterans.
To learn more, volunteer, or donate, visit housingforward.org, email development@ housingforward.org, or call 708.338.1724
Help us care for the whole child and create greater health equity! At the OPRF Infant Welfare Society and IWS Children’s Clinic, we serve publicly insured/uninsured children and address their whole health through sick and well child visits, dental care, behavioral health services, nutrition classes and other wrap-around programs. We treat more than 3,400 area children each year, including Oak Park, Chicago, Berwyn, Cicero and beyond. Support the whole health needs of children in our community today! $25 provides a mental health screening, $50 provides two vaccines, $100 provides a preventive dental cleaning.
Learn more and donate today at https:// childrenscliniciws.org/donate or 708-4068661.
L’Arche Chicago provides high quality care in community-integrated homes for adults with intellectual disabilities in the OPRF area. Our mission is lived through daily life shared in mutuality: afternoon walks to the park, doctor’s appointments, and dinner parties. Moreover, L’Arche is committed to life together in a way that welcomes difference. L’Arche Chicago is currently in the process of building a new ADA accessible home in South Oak Park that will extend this unique care model to four more adults with disabilities and address the accessibility
needs of current members of the community. Whether you’d like to contribute a one-time gift, or commit to a lifetime of giving to L’Arche Chicago, every dollar will create a lasting impact in our community!
Make a needed local impact through our people and mission at www.larchechicago. org/larcheforlife
Equity in the arts is the driving force behind Maywood Fine Arts’ programs and people. Access to affordable, high-quality instruction in dance, music, visual arts, drama, tumbling and fitness cannot be taken for granted among families MFA serves from nearby, under-resourced communities such as Maywood, Bellwood, and Chicago’s Austin neighborhood. MFA serves over 800 students ages 4 to 18 per week, the majority of whom are young people of color. MFA’s facilities anchor downtown Maywood. Families count on MFA’s safe, nurturing out-of-school time environment where children learn artistic and social skills and expand their worldviews.
To donate, visit maywoodfinearts.org or send checks payable to Maywood Fine Arts, 25 N 5th Ave, Maywood, IL 60153.
Organized in 1993 as a 501c3, the Maywood Youth Mentoring Program has served hundreds of middle to high-school youth providing a variety of programs, workshops, field trips, and experiences designed to increase academic potential and instill cultural pride. Since 2008, the program has hosted free monthly youth breakfasts with topics ranging from anger management and conflict resolution, etiquette, police/community interactions, sexual health, drug and alcohol avoidance, and academic excellence. Youths practice critical thinking skills to encourage positive life choices. Volunteer mentors interact with youths, providing positive role models for college and career choices. Funds are needed to continuously provide free services and incentives for participation.
To volunteer, or to donate, visit us at maywoodyouthmentoring.org, or contact Barbara Cole, founder/CEO, at barbaracole@maywoodyouthmentoring. org or 708-344-3577.
New Moms’ mission is to strengthen families by partnering with young moms as they progress toward housing stability, economic mobility, and family well-being. We believe in the strength, skills, and potential of all families and envision a future where all young moms and their children thrive! Coaches in our housing, job training, and family support programs partner with moms, 24 and under, to decrease stress, build social connections, and set and track personalized goals.
Together with their coach, moms build the foundations of long-term well-being for their families and communities.
Join us in this essential work!
www.newmoms.org/season
The Nineteenth Century Charitable Association strengthens our community through learning, giving, and sharing our landmark building through space grants to local non-profits, who account for 80% of its usage. We provide community outreach, scholarships, and public programming in five 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.
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 donation at nineteenthcentury.org.
The Oak Park Art League (OPAL) is one of the longest running non-profit arts organizations in Illinois. Since 1921, OPAL has brought arts education, appreciation, exhibitions, and artistic inquiry to the surrounding community. OPAL is committed to meaningful outreach to Oak Park and the surrounding communities through partnerships, on-site arts programming, and collaborations. The Oak Park Art League is located at 720 Chicago Ave., Oak Park, IL 60302 and online at oakparkartleague.org.
For more information about membership, exhibitions, classes, workshops, outreach, or to donate to these efforts, please contact Brad Nugent, Executive Director, at 708-386-9853 or email inquiries to oakparkartleague@gmail.com.
Invest in Oak Park’s future. The Oak Park-River Forest Community Foundation
manages eight endowment funds for the Oak Park Public Library. Monetary donations are tax deductible. Giving to these funds connects people and builds community, educates global citizens, and sustains, shares, and respects Oak Park’s community resources.
Choose the fund that means the most to you at oppl.org/give. Or contact Director of Finance Jeremy Andrykowski at jeremya@ oppl.org.
Oak Park Regional Housing Center has a mission to achieve vibrant communities while promoting intentional and stable residential integration throughout Oak Park. OPRHC is the only non- profit agency in Oak Park promoting intentional integrative housing options. OPRHC is celebrating 50 years of service to the Oak Park community. Consider giving a tax-deductible year end donation so that we may reach our goal to raise $250,000 by December 31, 2022! These funds will help us continue to help integrate and invigorate the Oak Park community for up to 500 individuals in the first quarter of 2023!
You may donate at //oprhc.org/donate. To learn more, please call 708-848-7150.
The mission of the Oak Park-River Forest Community Foundation is to unite community members and mobilize resources to advance a racially just society and equitable outcomes for residents of Oak Park, River Forest and surrounding communities. We envision a racially just and equitable society as the full inclusion of all people into a society in which everyone can participate, thrive and prosper. In an equitable society, everyone, regardless of the circumstance of birth or upbringing, is treated justly and fairly by its institutions and systems.
Visit oprfcf.org to learn more about our services to donors, scholars, and nonprofits.
The Historical Society of Oak Park and River Forest is the community’s storyteller, making history relevant in tangible ways that positively impact today’s residents including walking tours, school field trips, traveling exhibits, and house research. We operate the Oak Park River Forest Museum in an 1898 Oak Park Landmark at Lake and Lombard next to Stevenson Park. We invested $1 million in private funds to create a welcoming space in a former firehouse. Exhibits include “Open House: The Legacy of Fair Housing.” We are not supported by tax dollars and a gift of any amount funds our 2023 activities, research center, and knowledgeable staff.
Learn more and donate at oprfmuseum.org or 708-848-6755.
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 12th season will take place March 3-12, 2022. We’re excited to welcome Chicagoland audiences back live, in
addition to our virtual screenings. Join us for captivating films, engaging discussion, impactful action opportunities and community-building. Memberships start at $35. Learn more and donate at oneearthfilmfest.org/give.
Opportunity Knocks was established in 2009 to support people with intellectual and developmental disabilities as they live, work, learn, grow, and connect within their community. We believe in the strength, power, and value in the voice of every Warrior. We value the importance of an interdependent connection between each Warrior and their community, along with developing healthy relationships and social connections. We approach all of life’s experiences fearlessly, unhinged by abilities.
We are 95% privately funded and rely on the generous support of the community. Your gift is integral in moving our mission forward. Visit opportunityknocksnow.org to learn more.
Our Future Reads was founded to promote literacy by connecting curious readers with books that interest them. We partner with other non-profit agencies and survey the recipients to create personalized book donations. Through our surveys, the members request specific genres and we fulfill those requests with our book inventory. Our personalized donations create a higher likelihood that the books will be read and shared with their families and friends. We serve youthful and adult readers that may not have the means to buy every book on the shelf but still would love to read them. Let the curious be curious!
Donate today and learn more at https:// ourfuturereads.com
PAXA is a nonprofit that in 2022 celebrates five years of delivering on the mission of empowering parents to protect their children from sexual abuse.
PAXA offers programs like its PAXA Pointers™ Curriculum, which is a parent-focused curriculum designed to address foundational information about predatory behavior in scenarios where their child is easily accessible. The curriculum is anchored with a high quality printed P.A.X.A. Pointers™ Resource Guide that can be enhanced with a virtual or in-person presentation. The topics included are: Babysitters, Playdates, Sleepovers, Schools, Devices & Online Safety. Learn more by visiting PAXA.online and KIDSTOO.org
PING! (Providing Instruments for the Next Generation), a nearly 25-year-old, community nonprofit organization, provides band and orchestra instruments along with mentoring, workshops, and access to lessons, music camps, and trips to students in need in grades 4 through 12, bringing true equity to instrumental music in Oak Park and River Forest public schools. In our community’s high-quality school music programs, PING! students can be on par with peers, regardless of their family situation, and feel like they belong.
PING! serves approximately 130 young musicians annually, 70% BIPOC, bringing diversity to instrumental music classrooms and beyond.
Donate: pingoprf.org/ donate. Instrument donations: info@ pingoprf.org.
Alumna artist Deaconess Sara (Bauman) Nordling BA ’85, along with Anastasiya Camp BA ’20, executed a commission by Gary and Sue Loontjer to honor their daughter Kim Loontjer BS ’03 who received her heavenly homecoming in February 2019. Kim charged her family to celebrate women at her alma mater who lead others to fix their faith on Jesus Christ in order to secure their hope of heaven.
The outcome was the “Women of Faith” works of art, which are now part of Concordia’s permanent collection and hang in Ferguson Art Gallery. Deaconess Sara’s submission utilizes woven threads and vintage lace as a nod toward traditional women’s fiber work reinforced by hand stitched bible verses. A professor at Purdue University-Fort Wayne, she uses her medium of fibers and weaving to merge the most important areas of her life. “I focus on color, texture and design elements to convey thoughts, emotions, and concepts not always readily available in representational art,” said Deaconess Sara.
“As a Lutheran Christian University, integrating faith and learning is essential. Art is a natural springboard into interdisciplinary conversations about theology, history and other academic disciplines,” says Nikkole Huss, Professor of Art and Curator of the University’s collection. “The high level of technical skill in the art commissions invites viewers to slow down, take a closer inspection and uncover subtle details that tie directly to all Women of Faith.“
View “Women of Faith” at the Ferguson Art Gallery, located in Kretzmann Hall at Concordia University Chicago, 7400 Augusta St., River Forest, IL. Hours are Mon -Fri 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., and Sat - Sun 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Not all children have the same Oak Park school experience. In 2019, working with school administration, one D97 PTO provided snacks, extra clothes, and experiences for economically challenged students. In 2020, with nation-wide illness and job loss, it delivered small libraries, and struggled to provide food and assistance.
All D97 schools faced the same challenges. Currently, up to 20% of students in D97 schools qualify for free or reduced lunch, with even more families “just making it” or temporarily experiencing economic struggle.
In 2021, the PTO Council presiding over all D97 PTOs, along with the Diversity Council (DIVCO), prioritized centering the removal of economic barriers so that all students could have the same opportunities.
A district-wide coat drive caught the eye of the Good Heart Work Smart foundation (GHWS) which generously donated $100,000 towards the goal of creating an Angel Fund for families in need along with a commitment to donate $50,000
annually for three years.
The Angel Fund will give students financial access to:
• Field trips, school fees, supplies, and afterschool enrichment
• Yearbooks, graduation gowns, PE uniforms, and spiritwear
• Clothing, toiletries, food needs
Yet we continue to learn, through our diversity and equity lens, that existing needs are more than previously imagined. Growing the Angel Fund is paramount to ensuring that every student has every opportunity. Support this cause by sending tax deductible donations to:
Lincoln PTO, ATTN: D97 STUDENT ANGEL FUND, 1111 S Grove Ave, Oak Park, IL 60304
Son,
God’s greatest gift to us is the gift of Himself, in His
Jesus Christ. A tiny baby nestled in the manger, with His arms reaching out to embrace the world – through Him, we find comfort in His promise of salvation.
In all things, we are reminded that Jesus came to us as a gift and we are privileged to share that gift with others.Concordia University Chicago wishes you the blessings of the Christ Child this Christmas and throughout the New Year. Sponsored Content Concordia University Chicago • 708-771-8300 • cucchicago.edu From left to right: Sue and Gary Loontjer, Sara (Bauman) Nordling, Nikkole Huss, BettyAnn Mocek and Anastasiya Camp.
Access to justice should not depend upon your ability to afford an attorney. There are simply not enough legal aid lawyers to help people in dire need of civil legal aid. These include issues of safety from an abuser, adequate housing, critical care documents, and more. Pro Bono Network has enabled 425+ attorneys to give more than 28,000 hours of free legal assistance to 5,000 clients whose lives were meaningfully changed. Let’s transform lives together by increasing access to legal representation.
To get involved or donate, visit pro-bononetwork.org. Your support will make an impact on the lives of many!
Founded in 1988, Progress Center for Independent Living is a cross-disability organization governed and staffed by a majority of people with disabilities. Progress Center serves people with all types of disabilities in Suburban Cook County. We assist individuals in pursuit of their self-determined goals. Progress Center recognizes the innate rights, needs and diversity of the disabled, works toward their integration into community life, and serves as an agent of social change. Progress Center is dedicated to building a society in which people with disabilities exercise the same freedoms, rights, and civil liberties as everyone else.
Donate today and learn more at http:// progresscil.org/
Race Conscious Dialogues are designed to deepen awareness of identity, power and privilege, then to integrate learning with everyday life. This nonprofit community
resource offers a variety of cohorts both in-person and virtually, and the foundational workshop series consists of 4 sessions with light readings to be done in preparation. Conversations are framed around understanding Whiteness – our own racial identities, the historical and current harm being caused by Whiteness, and guided discovery of how we show up and work collectively to eradicate racism. Thank you for considering a donation as well as participation! www. raceconsciousdialogues.org
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 refresh the Children’s and Teen spaces, maintain the Memorial Garden for gatherings, offer community events like the Dooleys Band concert, explore the feasibility of re-purposing indoor space for community use, and more.
Please donate at rfplfoundation.org and help your Library continue to serve and connect our community for generations to come.
Spanish), and offered free of charge to survivors and their children.
Learn more and donate at sarahsinn.org
St. Angela has served the families of Chicago’s Austin neighborhood for more than five generations, committed to enriching the lives and futures of their children. We have a storied history and an extended family of generous alumni whose philanthropy provides scholarship funds and whose engagement keeps our campus beautiful. We are richly blessed and deeply grateful for the partnerships that have sustained us through the years. Now, early in our second century, we are proud to reaffirm our commitment to love and serve all those who choose to be part of our community. We ask those partners to recommit to our cause as well. Thank you!
Learn more about St. Angela School at saintangela.org or call us at (773) 626-2655.
Silk Road Rising is a community-centered artmaking and arts service organization rooted in Pan-Asian, North African, and Muslim experiences. Through storytelling, digital media, and arts education, we challenge disinformation, cultivate new narratives, and promote a culture of continuous learning. Our work expands and enriches the American story and explores how we understand both Americanness and belonging. In so doing, we create opportunities for communities of diverse backgrounds to experience cultural interchange, challenge racism and coloniality, and upend polarization.
provide less than half the funds needed for the Symphony’s performances. Your gift keeps the orchestra going strong and allows us to maintain affordable ticket prices, including free admission for all students through college. Please help us continue and strengthen our 91-year 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.
Thrive Counseling Center has provided mental health services to the greater Oak Park area 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. Hope, resilience, and recovery form the heart of our programs and services for youth and adults.
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.
Sarah’s Inn is a community-based organization whose mission is to improve the lives of those affected by domestic violence and to break the cycle of violence for future generations. We offer services in three areas of program focus: Intervention services for families affected 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 confidential, bilingual (English/
Learn how Silk Road Rising uses stories to help our world heal, and how you can support us by visiting www.silkroadrising. org.
The award-winning Symphony of Oak Park & River Forest and its
esteemed conductor Jay Friedman, continues to bring extraordinary and accessible concerts to our community. Ticket sales
My grandfather was president of the village in the late 60s, so we have ties to the Housing Center as a family. I am personally interested in an Oak Park that is not one type of renter. I have a racially blended family, and I don’t want a monolithic Oak Park. The Housing Center has helped me support diversity in my buildings.
I have a lot of pride in maintaining my buildings the way I do. By upholding my agreement and providing quality and safe housing, I feel like I’m able to help create a community. Everybody has a story and I like to play a little part in those stories to offer my renters a place where they can feel comfortable and where it will feel like home.
There is a big learning curve mastering the business of housing, and being a housing provider can be really hard. Mike at the Housing Center has been great about advising me on how to best maintain my buildings, and providing me with crucial information. I’ve learned so much from him.
Many initiatives are in full swing as the Oak Park Art League (OPAL) prepares for the 2023 exhibition and programming season and beyond. A few exciting organizational updates include new art courses and workshops, additional artist instructors, a more inclusive and equitable use of resources and programming, an increase in course registrants and members, as well as planning for updated space configurations and renovations.
Change and accommodation can be challenging and regenerative at the same time. According to Brad Nugent, Executive Director since March 2022, “the Board of Directors, who are all working volunteers, along with our Staff, genuinely appreciate all the individual discussions, cooperation, and support from our members, friends, and community leaders as we build this organization into a robust and
inclusive environment. With continued support, we are working to secure funding for building renovations, which include a new ADA-compliant restroom on the first floor, window replacements, roof and exterior work, electrical upgrades, and hopefully a second classroom on the first floor. As we acquire new resources, we look forward to updating internal processes and longterm projects in addition to the exterior capital improvements.”
You are cordially invited to a Holiday Champagne Brunch celebrating the Oak Park Regional Housing Center’s 50th Anniversary.
50th Anniversary Celebration
As a community-based, 501c non-profit organization, assistance from donors, artists, and the business community is essential. Please consider making a gift and donating to OPAL this holiday season. Visit in person and at oakparkartleague.org for OPAL’s offerings. The Board and Staff invite you to join with OPAL this new century, taking classes, visiting exhibits, becoming members, volunteering, and engaging with art. All are welcome!
Oak Park Art League • 708-386-9853 • oakparkartleague.org
Saturday, December 10, 2022 10:00 AM – 2:00 PM St. Catherine of Sienna – Maguire Hall 38 N. Austin Blvd. Oak Park, IL 60302
Live Music Champagne Brunch
Make your donation for tickets at bit.ly/holiday-brunch-50
Requested Donation: $150
Raise your glass to the next 50 years of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion as we celebrate continued change, growth
Champagne toast led by Congressman Danny K. Davis Representative of the 7th District of Illinois
Sponsored by
For more information, contact Anika Chase at achase@oprhc.org.
UCP Seguin believes that all people, regardless of ability, deserve to achieve their potential, advance their independence and act as full members of the community. So we stop at nothing to provide life skills training, assistive technology, meaningful employment and a place to call home for people with disabilities, as well as specialized foster care for children. Our goal: life without limits for people with disabilities. Make a difference in the lives of people with disabilities. Donate online at ucpseguin.org or send gifts to UCP Seguin, 332 Harrison Street, Oak Park IL 60304
Since 1974, Way Back Inn has successfully provided long-term residential and outpatient treatment for substance and gambling use 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 ext. 22.
A life best lived includes helping others experience a better life. When you give to the West Cook YMCA, you give to our community. 100% of your tax-deductible donation goes directly to providing scholarships to children, adults, and seniors- your friends and neighborstransforming their lives through access to health screenings, chronic disease prevention programs, after-school programs, swim lessons, life-skills training for residents, and Y memberships that can open the door to help each person become their best self. Make a difference right in your own community today through your support of West Cook YMCA’s scholarship fund.
To donate, visit WestCookYMCA.org/donate or send your check to West Cook YMCA, 255 S. Marion St., Oak Park, IL 60302. (708-3835200)
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 financial assistance to those participating in our year-round programs and summer day camp. To make a donation please visit wssra.net.
For 20 years, children have learned through PLAY in the safe, enriching environment of Wonder Works Children’s Museum on North Avenue. We put great care into creating a child-sized environment with 8 permanent exhibits that spark curiosity, creativity, and learning in the areas of science, math, literacy, and the arts for children from birth to 8. Your donations support special programs, exhibit improvements, free and discounted admissions for families in financial need, and more! Please join us in our mission to spark curiosity and innovation through play-based learning experiences.
Visit Wonder-Works.org to donate and support the power of play
YoungLives Chicago is a mentoring ministry devoted to loving and supporting teenage mothers and their babies.
YoungLives mentors walk alongside teen moms in authentic friendship, serving as a bridge to resources and supporting their academic, vocational, spiritual, and relational goals. YoungLives Chicago creates a community of belonging for young families to thrive. Teen moms meet twice a month with their mentors for YoungLives club and have the opportunity for a summer camp experience specifically designed as a respite for teenage moms. The cost of a week of camp is $500 for the whole family. Your gift impacts two generations at once! Please consider sponsoring a teen mom and her baby today. Thank you for being a part of our YoungLives village.
If you would like information about volunteering, please contact
Youth Crossroads supports youth, guiding them through life’s challenges, and inspiring them to discover new opportunities for personal development, healthy relationships, and positive community involvement. We provide youth in Chicago’s near west suburbs with the services they need to achieve success at home, in school, and in life. All services are free, in English and Spanish, including In-School and Community Counseling, Crisis Intervention, Youth Leadership Training, Workforce Development, After-School Enrichment, Food Pantries, and Summer Camp.
Your donation makes it possible for youth to get the guidance, support, and inspiration they need to build meaningful lives. Visit youthcrossroads.org for more information.
The Answer Inc., a 501(c) (3) not-for-profit organization, is dedicated to providing support, resources, education, recreation, and advocacy for families in the greater Chicago area that are challenged with supporting family members with Autism & Developmental Disorders. In addition to providing essential resources & services for parents and caregivers, our agency strives to help contribute to the continued growth, educational and recreational inclusion for the children and relatives specifically impacted. Learn more about The Answer at theanswerinc.org
Helping stray, abandoned, and otherwise needy animals in our local community is at the core of Animal Care League’s mission. There are so many homes full of love to give, and so many sweet animals in need — all it takes is to bring them together. And sometimes, the pursuit of this goal takes us beyond our immediate area, as was the case with a sweet pup named Kira.
When she was first rescued as a stray in Puerto Rico, she was in worrying condition, completely covered in thick, matted fur. The dirty mats covered her eyes to the point that she could barely see. Kira’s rescuer quickly took her to receive vet care and grooming, and in no time, a new dog emerged, nothing but sweet and grateful.
To help Kira find a home, she was brought to ACL, and she didn’t have to wait long for her lucky break. Almost immediately, she was adopted! Just like that, Kira’s path forward went
Kira finds a loving home with Mary.
from dangerous and uncertain to clear and joyful, and we’re so happy to know that she’ll be cozy, happy, and healthy for the holidays. Stories like Kira’s inspire us to continue working to help as many animals as possible, creating strong and lasting bonds in our community and beyond.
Scantodonateto
95% of Day Nursery children transition into Kindergarten with the skills for school success.
thedaynursery.org/donate/
Quality early childhood education for all children IS social equity.
Your gift today creates the foundation for tomorrow's adults.
1139 Randolph St, Oak Park, IL 60302 708.383.8211
Mary, a single parent and first-time mom, wanted to find THE place for her 3-year-old son, Luke. Luke often struggled with transitions and had some delays in meeting his developmental milestones. Luke’s previous child care situation often left Mary feeling defeated as a parent, isolated, and without feeling supported. Mary searched for a quality early childhood education program that could meet their needs. A co-worker suggested she call The Day Nursery.
The Day Nursery Parent Coordinator looked for ways to support both Luke and Mary throughout the entire enrollment process. Luke and Mary made several visits and met with the
teaching team. Before starting, the teachers worked with Mary to develop strategies and routines that were similar to the techniques she used at home to create consistency for Luke.
During Luke’s first day of attendance, Mary received a message from Luke’s teacher. She opened it and discovered a photo of Luke cleaning up blocks with peers, and smiling and the caption “Great first day! We are so glad you are here!” At that moment, Mary knew this was THE place!
Ask Mary about The Day Nursery, and she will tell you, “I have no words for how amazing The Day Nursery is. What a strong and loving school family we have now. Every day they make a
Elizabeth was sleeping in a parking garage in downtown Oak Park when she met Dannette, one of Housing Forward’s Street Outreach staff.
Each night, Elizabeth and a group of friends gathered in a corner of the garage to take shelter from the cold. Dannette would stop by on a daily basis. Eventually, as she and Elizabeth got to know each other, Dannette explained the support and services, including housing, that she could arrange for Elizabeth when she was ready. While she was reluctant to leave her friends at first, after several weeks Elizabeth decided it was time to make a change. Dannette immediately worked with the housing staff at Housing Forward to arrange placement in our Interim Housing Program. There, with a stable place to sleep and healthy meals, Elizabeth began building her future. With Dannette’s support, Elizabeth started working on important building blocks like medical care, public benefits and employment.
For the first time in a long time, Elizabeth could envision having her own apartment. In October, that possibility became a reality and finally she began creating a home for her and her two daughters. Elizabeth is excited about taking her next steps and looking forward to her future!
Find out more about Housing Forward and how it can help transform the lives of men, women, and families struggling with homelessness and housing crisis, go to housingforward.org/give.
On a cold February day, Shelley opened the front door to her Oak Park apartment where she was greeted by a stack of sixteen newspapers and bags of unopened mail. It was the day after Valentine’s Day and the collection of backdated issues of Wednesday Journal felt more like love letters than local news. Shelley snuggled up in the quiet comfort of her own home and read them in chronological order from oldest to most recent. She was using them as a tool to track time she had lost.
In November of the previous year, a heartrelated crisis landed Shelley in the emergency room and a series of subsequent surgeries and unexpected downturns kept in her in the hospital for four months straight. Most of the time she was fighting for her life remains a blur to Shelley. Though she fought her way back to good health with the care of an outstanding medical team and support staff, she struggled to make sense of all that had happened to her. “Coming home and reading those issues of
Wednesday Journal grounded me. They helped me to re-connect to my community, focus on something other than myself and make some sense of the time I couldn’t account for while I was in and out of consciousness,” said Shelley. “I love Wednesday Journal. I read it cover-to-cover every week, but reading those issues felt like going back in time. They made me feel normal after four months when nothing was normal.”
Subscribers like Shelley and GCM donors appreciate the attention Growing Community Media publications give issues they care about and understand local newsrooms should not be taken for granted. We are grateful Shelley shared her story with us and we are proud she is part of our GCM community. Her perspective celebrates the unique way local news sources keep residents meaningfully connected to the people, events and institutions inside their newsworthy communities. At GCM it’s about more than news.
Growing Community Media • 708-524-8300 • growingcommunitymedia.org
Get all
Visit the Joyful Giving Catalog online at:
A Place for All B11
e Answer, Inc… ...................................... B28, B34
Animal Care League… B25, B35
Austin Coming Together… B7, B25
Beyond Hunger… ....................................... B18, B25
BUILD… ...................................................... B24, B25
Byline Bank… B16, B40
Chicago West Community Music Center B4
Cicero Independiente...................................B9, B25
Coalition for Spiritual & Public Leadership .......................................................................B20, B25
Collaboration for Early Childhood ................... B25
Concordia University Chicago ................. B25, B31
D97 PTO Council and Diversity Council .......................................................................B27, B31
Day Nursery ................................................ B27, B36
Deborah’s Place B20, B27
Defy Ventures Illinois B27
Equity and Transformation ................................ B27
Ernest Hemingway Foundation of Oak Park ................................................................................B27
Frederick Law Olmsted Society of Riverside, IL ................................................................................B27
Friends of the Oak Park Conservatory B27, B28
Growing Community Media............B27, B37, B39
Don Harmon, Illinois Senate President B10 Hephzibah Children’s Association ........... B17, B29 Historical Society of Forest Park B21, B29 Housing Forward B29, B37 Infant Welfare Society ................................ B15, B29
L’Arche Chicago .......................................... B13, B29 Leaders Network B4, B12 Camille Lilly, Illinois House Representative ................................................................................B10
Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine B14
Maywood Fine Arts...................................... B6, B29 Maywood Youth Mentoring Program .............. B29 Nehemiah Project B6 New Moms B7, B29
Nineteenth Century Charitable Association .......................................................................B13, B29
Oak Park Art League B30, B33
Oak Park Festival eatre................................... B17
Oak Park Public Library ............................ B21, B30
Oak Park Regional Housing Center B30, B33
Oak Park-River Forest Community Foundation ...................................................................B2, B3, B30
Oak Park River Forest Museum B8, B30
One Earth Collective B8, B30
Opportunity Knocks B26, B30
Our Future Reads B23, B30
Parents Against Child Sex Abuse (PAXA) ....... B30
PING!.. B30, B35
Pro Bono Network...............................................B32
Progress Center for Independent Living B32
Race Conscious Dialogues ................................. B32
River Forest Public Library Foundation B32
ROYAL .................................................................. B11
Rush University Medical Center B5, B14
Sarah’s Inn .................................................... B28, B32
Silk Road Rising B32
St. Angela School ........................................ B26, B32
Symphony of Oak Park & River Forest B32, B35
rive Counseling Center .................................. B32
UCP Seguin B22, B23, B34
Way Back Inn ................................................ B6, B34
West Cook YMCA B18, B19, B34
West Suburban Special Recreation Association ................................................................................B34
Wonder Works ............................................ B26, B34
YEMBA B9
YoungLives Chicago ............................................ B34
Youth Crossroads.................................................B34
Byline is privileged to be a part of the OPRF community and is proud to have contributed more than $90,000 in sponsorships and support to the Oak Park and River Forest area this year, alone. Our team looks forward to continuing our commitment to customers and businesses in the Oak Park and River Forest community.
To learn more about our commitment to Oak Park and River Forest, visit bylinebank.com/oprf