W E D N E S D A Y
January 26, 2022 Vol. 42, No. 26 ONE DOLLAR
@wednesdayjournalinc
JOURNAL
@wednesdayjournal
@oakpark
of Oak Park and River Forest
OPRF girls defeat top-ranked team Page 17
OPRF moves to finalize financing on building upgrades Decision on blending new debt with reserve drawdown expected in February By F. AMANDA TUGADE Staff Reporter
The Oak Park and River Forest District 200 School Board is deciding on the appropriate way to finance a long list of building and maintenance projects over the next decade. At the Jan. 13 committee of the whole meeting, Superintendent Greg Johnson briefly laid out two payment options administrators developed to fund several renovation projects over the next decade, including roof repairs; field restorations, and updates to the school’s bathrooms, as well as its plumbing and drainage systems. Revamping the school’s ventilation, refurbishing its old corridors and fixing its electrical power systems round out the rest of the extensive to-do list. Johnson said some projects are intertwined with the district’s five-part Imagine OPRF capital improvement plans, which may impact decisions on spending and incurring debt. With the help of financial consultant Robert Grossi, Johnson shared with board members that they could issue a debt certificate or a debt service extension base (DSEB) bond to pay for the long-term maintenance projects. See D200 FINANCE on page 15
ALEX ROGALS/Staff Photographer
HAPPY BAGGER: Anthony Bellmar, of Happy Apple, fills bags with goodies for guests of the Rush Oak Park Hospital warming center during our January cold spell.
Nonprofits, restaurants team with Rush warming center Broad collaboration brings breakfast and dinner to those seeking shelter By MELISSA ELSMO Oak Park Eats Editor
Rush Oak Park Hospital has transformed its former Emergency Department into a 24/7 warming center at 610 S. Maple Ave. A collaboration between
a trio of non-profits and a bevy of local restaurants is bringing breakfast and dinner to guests seeking shelter from the cold. “Housing Forward, the Oak Park Homelessness Coalition, and the Village of Oak Park have had a relationship for
many years. Rush Oak Park and West Suburban Hospital were easy additions to our existing collaboration,” said Lynda Schueler, executive director of Housing Forward. “Rush’s warming center See WARMING CENTERS on page 2
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Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
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WARMING CENTERS
Sustenance on a cold night from page 1 is open 24/7 so adding a meal program there made sense to us. We expect the meal program to expand organically, and we are open to including West Sub if they see a need.” John Harris, coordinator of the Oak Park Homelessness Coalition, reached out to Ravi Parakkat, a village trustee and Takeout 25 founder, to ask if the organization would have an interest in coordinating meals for the center. Parakkat was enthused at the prospect of using the non-profit to assist with the program. “We reached out to Takeout 25 community members to back the cause and they generously donated $8,500 to keep the meal program cost neutral for restaurants providing meals,” said Parakkat. “Restaurant owners were quick to sign up to help. We actually had more takers than we needed and have a few restaurants on standby.” Takeout 25’s trial program is expected to run for six weeks providing breakfast and dinner Monday through Thursday for an average of 12 guests. Delivery First, a local delivery company, has stepped up to transport the meals at no cost and the community donations fully cover the costs for six weeks of meals sourced through Takeout 25 based on an allotment of $75 per day for breakfast and $150 per day for dinner. Housing Forward separately acquired a grant to provide meals between Friday and Sunday and intend to rely on existing restaurant partnerships to facilitate the weekend program. The warming center at Rush is open when temperatures dip below freezing and has a maximum capacity of 15 people with social distancing protocols in place. The program launched last week with Joana Fischer of Twisted Cookie, 7401 Madison St., Forest Park, providing apple pie cookies for the inaugural breakfast and Josh Darr of local start-up Darr-b-que serving a hearty meal of smoked brisket and almond pear cobbler for the kick-off dinner. Fischer said she jumped on board because she is inspired by Parakkat’s ongoing efforts to support local restaurants and Darr said participating felt like “the next right thing to do.” Oak Park’s Poke Burrito, Eastgate Café and Happy Apple Pie Shop also provided meals during the first week of the program. “The food community is so generous,” said Michelle Mascaro, owner of Happy Apple, 226 Harrison St. “Everybody is worthy of a meal. Good food, made with love, makes a real difference in people’s lives.” Mascaro, who provided warm spinach quiche and fresh or-
ALEX ROGALS/Staff Photographer
PIE-EYED: Michelle Mascaro and the crew at Happy Apple ready a shipment of dinner and dessert for those seeking warmth at the Rush Hospital warming center. anges for breakfast last week, notes that supporting the warming center is personal to her. She has a former employee who deals with complex mental health issues and grapples with homelessness. He is often a guest at Rush’s warming center. “This is the first time we’ve done anything like this,” said Schueler. “People using the center have been extremely grateful for the meals.” In the coming weeks the Oak Park based program is scheduled to receive support from Two Sisters Restaurant and Catering located in Chicago’s Austin neighborhood. “Food should not only be for people who can afford it,” said Veah Larde, chef owner of Two Sisters, 4800 W. Chicago Ave. “Why not help someone? Most people are a moment away from needing help— needing help to pay a bill, find some heat or get a meal.” In 2020, the pandemic forced Housing Forward to close the 24-hour overnight shelter it had operated for 29 years in the
community. The pause in the shelter program created a “hole of need” according to Harris and forced the organizations to develop a “two-pronged approach” to fill the service gap and combat issues of homelessness during the winter. Schueler and Harris credit, Michael Montino, the village government’s emergency preparedness coordinator, and fresh leadership at both Rush and West Sub, for helping to clarify ways they could meet the needs of people who do not have access to heat. In addition to promoting the five warming centers located inside Oak Park’s libraries and hospitals, they have developed a program with support from faith community leaders that triggers the opening of emergency overnight shelters in churches in the event of an extended winter weather event. “The partnership with Ravi, Takeout 25 and the local restaurant community drove up awareness about our local warming centers,” said Harris. “Community collaboration is necessary if you are going to change the world.”
Oak Park emergency warming centers ■ West Suburban Medical Center, 3 Erie St. Open daily from 6 p.m. until 6 a.m. in the Emergency Room ■ Rush Oak Park, 610 S. Maple Ave. Open 24/7 when temperatures dip below 32 degrees. Entrance is located in the old emergency room on the east side of the building.
ALEX ROGALS/Staff Photographer
HAND-OFF: Happy Apple owner Mascaro helps load up warm food on Harrison Street for cold guests at Rush Hospital.
■ Oak Park Public Library Main Branch, 834 Lake St. Mondays–Thursdays: 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday: Noon to 5 p.m.
■ Oak Park Public Library Dole Branch, 255 Augusta Monday: Closed Tuesday–Thursday: 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday: Noon to 5 p.m. ■ Oak Park Public Library Maze Branch, 845 Gunderson Ave. Mondays–Thursdays: 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday: Closed Saturdays: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday: Noon to 5 p.m.
In cases of prolonged extreme weather, an emergency overnight shelter will be open at a church or churches in Oak Park.
Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
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January 26-February 2
BIG WEEK Shake, Rattle & Read
Wednesday, Feb. 2, 10-10:30 a.m., virtually through Oak Park Public Library Join your favorite librarians live via Zoom for books, songs, and movement. These storytimes are best for kids up to age 5. Register now at oppl.org/calendar.
Gerald McLendon Thursday, Jan. 27, 8 p.m., FitzGerald’s, Berwyn Chicago has a strong soul tradition extending back to the days when the Impressions used to harmonize within the walls of the Seward Park fieldhouse. Vocalist Gerald McLendon is keeping that tradition going, from hipster rock clubs to Gold Coast lounges. Tonight he’ll be blessing the suburbs with his churchy crooning. $10, 6615 Roosevelt Road, Berwyn.
All About Gender: What Every Parent Should Know School Of Rock Saturday, Jan. 29, 11 a.m., FitzGerald’s, Berwyn The illustrious School Of Rock has revolutionized music instruction for kids by introducing rock and related sounds to the curriculum. This rocking recital shows the Elmhurst branch at one of the city’s finest showcases. $10, 6615 Roosevelt Road, Berwyn.
Thursday, Jan. 27, 7:30-8:30 p.m., virtually through Oak Park Public Library
Cindi Cronin & Eustachia Saturday, Jan. 29, 8-11 p.m., Donny G’s.
Cindi Cronin has a solid background in musical theater, which she applies handily to her renditions of pop standards. 7308 W. North Ave., Elmwood Park.
Thrive Mental Health Center brings this Zoom webinar discussing the transgender and gender non-conforming experience. Moderated by Rick B. Smith, a couple and family therapist who is also the proud father of a transgender son and a cisgender daughter. Register at oppl.org/calendar.
Grief Journaling Sunday, Jan. 30, 2-4 p.m., virtually through Oak Park Public Library Have you experienced the loss of a loved one (a partner, family member, mentor, friend, etc.)? Are you experiencing ambiguous loss or anticipatory grief? Even if you don’t consider yourself a writer, you are welcome to join us on this journey of journaling. Each session will begin with prompts and/or a guided meditation followed by time to journal. At the end of each session, we will set aside time to share, if you feel so moved. Feel free to come to any or all workshops. Register now at oppl.org/calendar.
Grosso Brothers/Ricky Liontones Friday, Jan. 28, Outta Space Both of these acts specialize in pop tunes from the ‘90s. If you still harbor a crush on Ally McBeal and get a rush of nostalgia hearing Hootie & the Blowfish, this one’s for you! $10, 6840 32nd St., Berwyn.
Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
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Oak Park school social workers hail mental-health-days law A path to reducing stigma on mental health, especially during pandemic
By F. AMANDA TUGADE Staff Reporter
Local school officials say that a new state law allowing students to have five excused mental health days each school year is helping strengthen the conversations surrounding social and emotional wellness in and outside the classrooms. Under the new law, students in Illinois public schools who are between the ages of 6 and 17 can now take up to five excused mental health days without a medical note. Students who are absent will also be given a chance to make up missed schoolwork. Backed by Gov. J.B. Pritzker, the new law, which went into effect earlier this month, came on the heels of the COVID pandemic’s two-year anniversary. Throughout the pandemic, families, education leaders and lawmakers statewide have worked to highlight the stressors impacting children and teens, including social isolation, school closures and anxiety about contracting the novel coronavirus. “One of the biggest gains will be that [the new law] normalizes mental health needs, or maybe, for some people, for themselves, [it will] legitimize the need for a mental health day,” said Abby Berman, a social worker at
Gwendolyn Brooks Middle School in Oak Park. Early on in the pandemic, from March 2020 to October 2020, hospitals across the nation saw the number of mental health visits by children aged 5 to 11 years old rise to 24% and 31% for older children and teens between 12 and 17 years old, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported. Other research showed that parents noticed their young children’s behavior changed drastically during the pandemic and became more irritable, fearful or clingy. Shortly after the
pandemic began, one nonprofit, the America’s Promise Alliance, surveyed nearly 3,300 teens and found that 30% of them were “unhappy” or “depressed” and became increasingly worried about “having their basic needs met.” Overall, researchers said the pandemic exacerbated issues of mental health, especially for students of color or those who belong to the LGBTQ+ community. Berman said school officials at Brooks and across Oak Park District 97 had been privy to their students’ mental health needs and tried to build up their resources and support system long before the COVID-19 pandemic started. The district currently has a total of 20 social workers, one of whom joined the team last year, Berman said. During the pandemic, D97 also partnered with DePaul University and the Community Mental Health Board of Oak Park Township and launched a series of community talks, encouraging conversations around coping with anxiety, understanding depression or transitioning back to in-person learning. When schools fully reopened last fall for in-person learning, Berman recalled how she and her colleagues saw students struggling with being back in the classroom. There were some students who were adjusting to sitting in
a classroom surrounded by their peers, while others were trying to get accustomed to being around teachers and staff at school, instead of their families at home, she said. “The isolation was really hard for all of us. Socialization is such an important part of the child’s experience,” Berman said. “... It took a long time for them to rework that muscle and get back into the groove of like ‘I’m in school all day. If something is stressful, I have to deal with it head on. I have to ask for help.’” Reflecting on the past two years of the pandemic, Berman believed that the new law is a benefit and hopes people will finally recognize that mental health is a “real thing, a real health concern that we should all take seriously.” Karin Sullivan, district spokeswoman at Oak Park and River Forest High School District 200, echoed Berman’s sentiments. “The passage of this law affirms the idea that mental health is as important to overall wellness as physical health,” Sullivan wrote in an email to Wednesday Journal. “Allowing students the time to attend to their mental well-being – which for many has been very negatively affected by the pandemic – is an important and very public step toward removing the stigma that can surround issues of mental health.”
CLAIM YOUR VOICE: D97's Annual Legislator's Forum Featuring: Senate President Don Harmon, Majority Leader Senator Kimberly Lightford Representative La Shawn Ford, Representative Camille Lilly You are invited to a Zoom webinar. Chat Q&A available. Details and Zoom link can be found at op97.org When: Jan 26, 2022 07:30 PM C.T. (US and Canada) Topic: CLAIM YOUR VOICE: Legislators Forum 1.26.2022
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Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
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Oak Parkers meet village manager finalists
Candidates did not interact directly with attendees of virtual forum By STACEY SHERIDAN Staff Reporter
About 20 people tuned into Oak Park’s virtual village manager candidate forum last Sunday night. The forum marked the first occasion the public heard directly from the final pool of candidates, which is now down to Interim Village Manager Lisa Shelley; Eric Johnson of northwest suburban Carpentersville; and Lionel Lyons of Petersburg, Va. Katy Rush, a staff member of recruitment firm GovHR and a past village manager of nearby Riverside, moderated the forum, which lasted just over an hour and a half. While members of the public had the opportunity to submit their questions prior to the forum, the questions were vetted by GovHR and only Rush was able to interact directly with the finalists. While Shelley leaned on her considerable experience working for the village of Oak Park for two decades during her answers, Johnson and Lyons had no such luxury. Neither has worked with the village of Oak Park previously. The topics addressed ran the gamut from candidates’ experience promoting sustain-
ability in local government to the importance of financial solvency. The finalists were united in preaching the importance of working in partnership with elected officials, the community and other taxing bodies and local organizations. When asked their top three priorities should they become the next village manager of Oak Park, Shelley looked to the village board and its current goals for inspiration. She named sustainability, an assessment of the police department and continuing reparations conversations. As a fourth priority, she named working in partnership with the village board. Johnson’s priorities were to focus on keeping the village’s financial state “on track” and building relationships with staff, village board, community and stakeholders. “With the money and the energy and the relationships, you can accomplish anything that the board wants to put forward, but you gotta build that foundation first,” he told the attendees. He listed boosting morale and trust in government among his top three priorities as well, recounting how the person that proceeded him in the role of village manager of Carpentersville micromanaged employees, made people afraid to admit mistakes for fear of “random firings” and at times conducted “open warfare” with employee unions. “It was just not a great place to work,” he said. Johnson told forum attendees he immediately set out to improve the organization’s
culture and raise the spirits of staff. “When people are happy where they work, you’re going to get more productive work out of them. They’re going to feel more engaged and impassioned to do good things for the community,” said Johnson, who has experience both working in government and as an elected official. For Lyons, who spent decades in city government in Phoenix before moving to a much smaller community in Virginia, his top priorities were to foster continued financial stability, collaborative leadership, as well as engaged leadership and partnership. “When I talk about engaged leadership, it’s the ability to work, grow and develop the trust of the staff. … to be able to provide the kind of quality services that the village and the community deserves,” he said. Rush raised diversity and equity as a topic and asked the finalists to describe challenges they have faced regarding diversity in local government. In Lyons’ time working as the director of the city of Phoenix’s equal opportunities department for the majority of the 1990s, he said one of the biggest issues he encountered was a “police-city council incident,” which he described only as “ugly,” that ultimately led to him and the then-police chief putting together a panel of 50 community partners. Lyons told attendees the panel went on to make 32 recommendations to the mayor and city council that were put in place. He listed civilian police training and body cameras as among key recommendations.
“We think that process was a step in the right direction,” he said. He also shared that he was very involved in conversations around fair housing and in coordinating the Martin Luther King Jr. Day celebrations, as well as reviewing the city’s policies, practices and procedures to ensure the city was making equity a priority. Shelley mentioned the National League of Cities learning sessions that village staff, the village board and citizen commissions participated in back in 2020. She also talked about committing to hire an equity coordinator during the last budget cycle. Johnson talked about the efforts Carpentersville, which he said was about “50 percent Latino,” many first-generation immigrants from Mexico, has made to become a more actively inclusive community, following the repeal of an “English only” ordinance for the community which was enacted 10 years ago. The piece of legislation was “deeply rooted” in fear of the community changing, according to Johnson, but was repealed shortly before he began working with the community. He said that he and the village board have been supporting and funding more cultural events. The forum was only one part of the final round of interviews. The three finalists will sit through further interviews conducted by panels over the course of Tuesday and Wednesday. The village board is expected to make that final decision by the end of this month or in early February.
Village of Oak Park names final threesome Interim Village Manager Lisa Shelley among finalists
By STACEY SHERIDAN Staff Reporter
Interim Village Manager Lisa Shelley is among the three finalists in line for the Oak Park village manager position. She is in the running alongside Eric Johnson and Lionel Lyons, both of whom come from outside of Oak Park. In a break from tradition, the village board has publicly announced the names of the finalists and will host a virtual public forum to introduce the candidates. That forum will be held this Sunday, Jan. 23. Johnson currently serves as the village manager of northwest suburban Carpentersville, where he oversees roughly 145 employees and a budget of $83.6 million. Johnson has been in that position for almost three years. Prior to Johnson’s time in Carpentersville, he spent a little over a year as the township administrator in Schaumburg. Before that, he was township supervisor and treasurer of DeKalb, a position he was in for just over six years. He also taught political science as an adjunct professor at Kishwaukee College and was a prosecuting attorney as a state’s attorney law clerk for DuPage County. Johnson has 12 years of experience working in local government and holds a juris doctor degree, as well as a bach-
man resources. He also served as the assistant to the mayor, where he was responsible for budget and economic development. He holds a master’s degree in public administration and a bachelor’s degree in political science. He studied at Ohio State University and North Carolina A&T University. Of the three finalists, Shelley has the benefit of name recognition in Oak Park. Previously Oak Park’s deputy village manager, Shelley has been serving as interim village manager of Oak Park since former vilLISA SHELLEY LIONEL LYONS ERIC JOHNSON lage manager Cara Pavlicek’s departure last August. She is currently overseeing the village of Oak Park’s elor’s degree in political science, from Northern Illinois Uni360 employees and its $160 million budget. Shelley preversity. viously worked as the assistant to the village manager and With 37 years of experience, Lyons has had the longest assistant to the public works director. career in local government among the three finalists. He She has also worked for other Illinois communities inis also the only finalist from out of state. Lyons previously cluding Woodridge, Barrington and Lake Bluff. Combined, served as the deputy city manager for development and op- she has a total of 30 years working in local government. erations in Petersburg, Virginia., where he supervised 190 Shelley has a master’s degree in public administration of the organization’s 619 employees and oversaw a budget from Northern Illinois University, as well as a bachelor’s of $40 million. degree in political science from Lake Forest College. Previously, Lyons spent 20 years working for the city All three finalist are members of the International City/ of Phoenix, Arizona, where he led three different depart- County Managers Association, an organization of profesments: equal opportunity, development services and hu- sional city and county managers.
Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
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COVID test firm, lab operating local pop-ups accused of fraud Illinois AG demands continued shutdown; FBI confirms raid
By BOB UPHUES
building is now the home of the Free Church, which bought the property in 2020. The location was a newer one for Center for Covid Control, having opened on Jan. 10. That testing site closed its doors on Jan. 14 along with other Center for Covid Control locations. Unlike the other local locations, however, the Oak Park Avenue site reopened its doors on Jan. 17. “They told us we could resume testing because the lab was able to produce the results,” said Pastor Chuck Colegrove, who was at the site when a Growing Community Media reporter visited on Jan. 20. The Oak Park testing site remained open to the public on Jan. 21, but Colegrove said it was no longer affiliated with Center for Covid Control. Instead, Colegrove said, the site was being run by one of Center for Covid Control’s
gone on Jan. 21, replaced by a simple sandwich board sign in front of the building indicating a free COVID testing site was inside. A check of Illinois Secretary of State reIllinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul cords shows that Ravinia Health Group LLC announced late Jan. 20 that his office has was created in September 2021 and lists its demanded that Center for Covid Control, a principal office in northwest suburban Park Rolling Meadows-based company which proRidge. The manager is listed as Shanawaz vided free COVID-19 testing at pop-up sites Khan, a Chicago resident. throughout the Chicago area, extend their The Ravinia Health website’s “About Us” voluntary shutdown of test sites “for the page gives a vague description of the comforeseeable future.” pany as a “distinctive organization applying He also stated his office had launched an the highest level of service in the fight against investigation of the company in response SARS – coV-2 (Covid-19) by offering varying to complaints from Illinois residents, which forms of testing.” It also states, “We partner “have ranged from testing results being dewith a CDC approved & licensed laboratory.” layed or not received at all, to results being That lab partner is not disclosed on that provided to individuals who were never adpage, but at the bottom of the “Services” page ministered a test, to tests being stored impropof the Ravinia Health website, it directs those erly and staff incorrectly using PPE and face looking for test results to masks.” O’Hare Clinical Lab, which Meanwhile, USA Today first Illinois Secretary of State reported Sunday that the FBI records show to be located in had raided the Center for Covid a different suite at the same Control’s Rolling Meadows headaddress as Ravinia Health in quarters, which shares an adPark Ridge. The manager of dress with its primary lab partO’Hare Clinical Lab Services ner, Doctors Clinical Laboratory, is Nasir Qader. on Jan. 22. Center for Covid Control’s “The FBI was conducting primary testing lab partner court-authorized law enforceis Doctors Clinical Laboratoment activity in Rolling Meadry, which is also named in the ows yesterday,” FBI spokesperMinnesota lawsuit. Doctors son Siobhan Johnson told USA Clinical Laboratory shares Today. the same Rolling Meadows Center for Covid Control conaddress as Center for Covid firmed on its website that their Control and was engaged to voluntary shutdown, which process the thousands upon started Jan. 14, would extend bethousands of PCR tests they yond their planned re-open date BOB UPHUES/Senior Editor promised results for within of Jan. 22. “CCC remains committed to The Illinois Attorney General on Jan. 20 demanded the Center for Covid 72 hours. The complaints about providing the highest level of Control continue the shutdown of pop-up testing sites that it voluntarily the companies in the Mincustomer service and diagnostic nesota lawsuit mirror some quality and will not resume col- began on Jan. 14. The site that remained open at 200 N. Oak Park Ave. of those Growing Comlection of patient samples until (above) in Oak Park last week is no longer affiliated with the company, munity Media heard as it staffing resources permit CCC said the property’s owner, and the signage has been since removed. researched local COVID-19 to operate at full capacity,” the pop-up testing sites run by company stated on its website. The Illinois attorney general’s demand apparent former lab partners, Ravinia Health. Center for Covid Control and another outfit “I don’t have all the information on when called Free Covid Testing Site (FCTS), which came a day after Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison announced he had sued Center the change happened,” said Colegrove, who uses its lab partner’s name, Northshore Clinifor Covid Control and its primary lab partner, added he requested “better documentation” cal Labs, interchangeably. According to online data from the Centers Doctors Clinical Laboratory, alleging they from Ravinia Health. “I said, ‘Listen, you’re failed to report results to state health authori- putting us in a spot, because most of those for Disease Control, Doctors Clinical Laboraties, deceived customers by promising results other [testing sites], they’re going to close up tory has been paid more than $120 million in they could not deliver on time or did not de- shop and disappear, and no one will ever see federal reimbursements for COVID-19 testing while Northshore Clinical Labs has received liver at all and provided fraudulent test results them again.’ But this is our life right here.” Someone from Ravinia Health had ap- more than $137 million from the federal govto customers. Rolling Meadows-based Center for Covid proached the church prior to Jan. 10 about ernment after submitting claims from people Control operated pop-up sites in a storefront opening a free testing site, said Colegrove, and who were said to be uninsured. O’Hare Clinical Lab Services has been at 9219 Broadway Ave. in Brookfield and in a he agreed it would be a beneficial service for paid nearly $180 million in federal claims for mobile pod at 1527 Harlem Ave. in Forest Park the community. “It just felt like a great thing to offer the com- conducting testing services, according to the until Jan. 14, when they abruptly paused operations in the face of an avalanche of com- munity,” Colegrove said. “Within a few blocks CDC. Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul plaints and heightened scrutiny by officials in there are a lot of apartments.” When the site opened on Jan. 10, workers on Jan. 11 issued a warning to residents who several states, including Illinois. Center for Covid Control also operated a brought with them signage indicating it was a were considering using the services of the testing site in the lobby of the former Oak Center for Covid Control site. That signage re- pop-up testing providers and followed up a Park Arts Center at 200 N. Oak Park Ave. The mained up through Jan. 20. Those signs were statement confirming his office had opened Editor
a formal investigation into Center for Covid Control. Neither Northshore Clinical Labs nor FCTS are the subjects of any investigations at this time. On Jan. 17 Northshore Clinical Labs announced that it “has paused all third-party operation of COVID -19 testing pop-up sites.” Meanwhile, visitors to the FCTS website now are greeted with the message: “Our Website Is Undergoing Maintenance. Thank you for your patience, FCTS!” FCTS/Northshore Clinical Labs had operated pop-up sites at 2704 Harlem Ave. in Riverside; at the North Riverside Park Mall, 7501 Cermak Road; inside a vacant storefront at 321A Harlem Ave. in Forest Park; at 6325 W. North Ave. in Oak Park; and at 6816 W. North Ave. in Chicago. All of the local FCTS/Northshore pop-up testing locations were closed as of Jan. 20, though signage remained on the location at 2704 Harlem Ave. in Riverside. According to the lawsuit filed by Minnesota’s attorney general, former employees of Center for Covid Control reported that the company could not keep up with the volume of tests as it expanded rapidly across the country. By early December 2021, according to the lawsuit, Center for Covid Control was administering 8,000 to 10,000 tests per day in Minnesota and data entry workers were unable to keep pace. “Employees have been gathering incoming tests in garbage bags and piling them in various corners of their office without any semblance of organization,” the lawsuit states. When employees asked the Center for Covid Control’s owners, Akbar Syed and Aleya Siyaj, for more help they reportedly refused. Instead, according to the lawsuit, Siyaj “instructed employees to ‘streamline’ data entry by entering the name of a patient and immediately hit a series of keys that would input defaults for the remaining entries, including defaulting a patient’s insurance information to ‘uninsured.’” The company then would reportedly seek reimbursement from the federal government, claiming those with private insurance were actually uninsured. Because of the huge backlog of tests waiting to be processed and knowing that tests were no longer “good” after three days or so, a Center for Covid Control official reportedly instructed employees to post-date test samples to make them appear more recent than they were and then send them on to the lab for processing. Some people who had competed online forms to receive tests, but who actually never followed through with getting tested, complained that they received a test result nonetheless from Center for Covid Control. “I’m holding these companies accountable that sent back false or inaccurate results, when they send them back at all, for deceiving Minnesotans and undermining the public’s trust in testing,” Ellison said in a press release.
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Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
OAKPARK.COM | RIVERFOREST.COM
Another COVID-19 outbreak at middle school in River Forest District 90 says Roosevelt School has had five outbreaks in the last three weeks
By F. AMANDA TUGADE Staff Reporter
River Forest District 90 reported two more COVID-19 outbreaks at Roosevelt Middle School last week, bringing the total number of confirmed outbreak cases to five in the last three weeks. District officials said an outbreak may have also occurred at one of its elementary schools, but that has yet to be determined by the Cook County Department of Public Health. State and county public health officials defined outbreaks as multiple cases impacting at least 10 percent of teachers, staff and students within a core group, or individuals “who were together during an exposure period.” Three COVID cases within a “specified core group” also constitute an outbreak, health officials said. District 90 spokeswoman Dawne Simmons said the recent outbreaks at Roosevelt and Lincoln fit the latter part of that definition and are deemed school-based transmissions. She told Wednesday Journal that D90 joins many schools in the area and across the nation that returned to in-person learning after winter break and saw an increase
in COVID-19 cases because of the omicron variant. As of Jan. 20, upon returning from a two-week holiday break early this month, district officials reported 154 new cases of COVID-19 among staff and students across its three schools – Roosevelt, Lincoln and Willard Elementary. “Before we got back from winter break, we went 13 months without any [COVID cases that had] school-based transmissions,” she said. “Now, we did have cases of COVID, of course, but none of them were traced to school-based transmission.” In a Jan. 19 email, Superintendent Ed Condon told school employees and families that the two new outbreaks at Roosevelt stemmed from two sixth-grade classrooms while the outbreak at Lincoln came from a third-grade classroom. Other outbreaks at Roosevelt occurred in another sixth-grade classroom, as well as seventh-grade and eighth-grade classrooms, Simmons said. The district’s nursing team has notified the families of the students who were in those “impacted” classrooms and continued to expand their outbreak testing, Condon wrote in the email. Simmons told the Journal that D90 con-
tinues to maintain its “rigid” safety mitigations, which now include supplying staff and students with surgical-type face masks and does not plan on switching back to remote learning. In an email, Condon reminded faculty, staff and families that they should monitor their health and stay at home if they develop any symptoms, as well as reach out to their health provider for COVID-19 testing if needed. District 90 recently partnered with the Illinois Department of Public Health and the Illinois Emergency Management Agency to host another vaccination clinic on Jan. 25 at Roosevelt. The clinic was held from 4 to 8 p.m. and open to district students, families and community members. First and second doses of the COVID-19 vaccine, along with booster shots, were offered. A follow-up clinic is planned for Feb. 15 at Roosevelt. “District 90 believes that the best place for students is in-person, and so we are working extremely hard to make sure that we are able to keep our schools open for inperson instruction,” Simmons said, adding the district is grateful for the faculty and other employees who work together day in and day out.
FILE
District 90 is rethinking its back-to-school plan for Roosevelt Middle School (above) and Lincoln and Willard elementaries.
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Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
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RibFest Every Day!
ALEX ROGALS/Staff Photographer
The village board has given the green light to build ResCorp’s new development on this site at Austin and Van Buren.
Oak Park approves 7 Van Buren complex Sustainability efforts outweigh parking concerns By STACEY SHERIDAN Staff Reporter
The Oak Park Residence Corporation sailed through the final stage in the village’s development process, receiving unanimous support from the village board to build a solar-powered and affordable apartment complex at 7 Van Buren St. The structure will be the “most significant net-zero multi-family building in the upper Midwest,” according to OPRC executive director and former village president David Pope. OPRC’s commitment to affordability and sustainability secured the village board’s approval at the Jan. 18 meeting. Trustee Chibuike Enyia called the work put into the project “commendable,” noting the continuing and rapid deterioration of the planet’s condition. “It’s becoming scarier and scarier to see what is going on with global warming and how our environment is changing around us so quickly,” he said. The new project will replace a two-story mid-century apartment building which is also owned by OPRC. The building is already vacant. Not everyone was as thrilled with the plans as the village board, however. The project garnered particularly high interest from the community. Trustee Jim Taglia said the board had received “probably a couple hundred” emails from people in favor of the project or against with “almost none in between.” Public comments at the meeting were decidedly polarized as well, although only five were read per side. Residents were either staunchly supportive or unambiguously opposed. Those in opposition decried the project’s lack of adequate onsite parking; OPRC received zoning relief to decrease the number of parking spots required of a structure of that scale from 34 spots to only 17. Height was likewise a concern. The structure will stand just under 72 feet, having secured further relief to build higher than the zoning code’s maximum of
45 feet. Opposing commenters shared anxiety that the OPRC structure would overshadow the historic Poley multi-family building just to the south at 408 S. Austin Blvd., although the Historic Preservation Commission signed off on the project. Those in favor of the project praised OPRC for its efforts to make the building sustainable, as well for investing in an underdeveloped part of town. OPRC has also promised to make rent affordable; the non-profit development organization makes 20 percent of the units in all of its buildings affordable to individuals at 50 percent area median income or below, according to Pope. Athena Williams, executive director of the Oak Park Regional Housing Center, was among the project’s supporters. The project narrowly received the endorsement of the Plan Commission, which recently voted 5-3 in OPRC’s favor with one commissioner absent. The vote was tense; a tie would have resulted in a negative recommendation to the village board. The decision came down to Plan Commission Chair Iris Sims, who cast the final affirmative vote. Sims told the board it was “one of the most thorough reviews” the commission had done in her time as a member. The commission discussed the project over the course of four meetings and had “kicked the tires” painstakingly, especially in respect to parking. While the board made an effort to politely recognize the apprehensions of those in opposition, each member was firmly in favor of the project. Trustee Arti Walker-Peddakotla, who has voted against several development proposals during her term, was won over by the project. “I wish we see more developments like this in the future,” she said. The village board also passed a companion ordinance allowing for the vacation of a portion of the village-owned parkway adjacent to Van Buren Street between Austin Boulevard and the north-south alley to the west of 7 Van Buren St.
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Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
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PROVIDED
BEYOND THE BINARY: Oak Park and River Forest High School’s Leadership and Launch students pay a visit to Buckingham Fountain in Chicago.
OPRF teachers, staff commit to equity mission Programs, resources availbale to help students feel more welcome, included
By F. AMANDA TUGADE Staff Reporter
For many faculty and staff at Oak Park and River Forest High School, promoting equity has become a focal point in and outside their classrooms. They want to make sure their students feel welcomed and offer them ample room to grow, learn and discover. Take Ginger Bencola, the school’s prevention and wellness coordinator. Over the last few years, Bencola has worked to advocate for LGBTQ+ students and hosts a weekly support group at OPRF called Beyond the Binary for trans, nonbinary and gender-nonconforming students. Or Melinda Novotny and John Hoerster, a pair of teachers who founded a leadership course that brings upperclassmen and underclassmen together. There’s also Patrick Chrisp and Shannon Perryman, a couple of motivational mentors who recently created a mentorship program for students of color. These are just some of the many efforts that fall under what the school calls “Equitable Excellence in Action.” In recent months, the school released a newsletter titled “Equitable Excellence in Action” and shared with district faculty, staff and families its commitment to equity – and what that looks like in practice. For Superintendent Greg Johnson, the words “equity” and “excellence” are synonymous. “You don’t strive for one and then pause
and take a deep breath, and then go toward within. It’s work that’s personal, they said. When Novotny and Hoerster started Leadthe other. That’s not how it works,” Johnson ership and Launch seven years ago, two said told Wednesday Journal. Echoing Johnson, Bencola opened up their idea was simple: They wanted freshmen about the ways she and her colleagues have to feel more comfortable in high school, so sought to cultivate a safe space for their LG- why not partner them with juniors and seniors who can show them the BTQ+ students. In the last four ropes? years, the district’s Board of They explained further the Education and administrators idea, in some ways, hit closer adopted a set of policies and to home. Growing up, Novotny procedures to affirm students’ and Hoerster were the eldest gender identities, cementing among their siblings and often the foundation of the district’s helped guide their younger sibgender support plans. The lings. plans aimed to address names “I have a younger sister,” and pronouns, locker and bathHoerster said, “and I know afroom use, overnight school trip ter I left [high school] and she accommodations and more. More recently, this fall, the disentered high school, just even trict installed eight all-gender having name recognition, like JOHN HOERSTER restrooms for students. teachers seeing the name on Leadership & Launch instructor “As a social worker and as a the roster, hearing the last
“Coming back in-person, I think students wanted to find more ways to connect with each other and with other students.”
member of the LGBT community, I genuinely believe it’s life-saving and life-changing work. I really can’t express enough how lucky I feel to be at OPRF who has really embraced this work and embraced supporting this population,” Bencola told the Journal. “I know that is not the case at every school or every district.” That’s the thing, Novotny and Hoerster said. An educator’s desire to create an inclusive place for their students comes from deep
name and saying, ‘Oh, are you John’s sister?’” “Just that one little connection where a student feels like they’ve been singled out in a positive way, they’ve been recognized in a positive way … I think it opens doors. It opens opportunities. It opens connections,” he continued. Not everyone has that, which is why Novotny and Hoerster first created Leadership and Launch. In the course, juniors and seniors mentor and support freshmen. They
meet about three times a week and help them with homework during study halls, as well as find other resources, activities and more. This year, the program has 126 leaders – it’s biggest cohort yet. “There was a lot of excitement for all sorts of reasons,” Hoerster said about this year’s large turnout. “Coming back in-person, I think students wanted to find more ways to connect with each other and with other students.” Patrick Hardy, executive director for equity and student success, agreed with Novotny and Hoerster on the importance of mentorship. Hardy, who works with Perryman and Chrisp, shared that the pair’s Motivational Mentorship program gives students of color the chance to gather and talk. This isn’t a one-on-one experience; this is a group-led, Hardy said. According to a school newsletter, the program runs daily, each day a different theme. For example, on Marathon Monday provides students an opportunity to discuss one topic and listen to each other’s perspectives, while What’s Up Wednesday focuses on reflection and how that topic impacts their life or the people around them. Hardy explained further that the benefits of having group conversations is clear: There’s a “sense of acceptance,” “sense of self-esteem” and shared connectedness, he said. “A group mentorship model can really be positively impacted when you put them in that type of setting,” he shared.
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Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
Balloonsicles! Joshua Wood is back with his annual polychrome igloo. In past winters, he froze milk cartons to serve as multicolored ice blocks. This year represents a technological innovation: Frozen balloons! Not sure how well it sleeps on these frigid nights, but Joshua hasn’t indicated whether he plans to actually spend the night there.
Photos by ALEX ROGALS/Staff Photographer
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Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
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S P O N S O R E D
C O N T E N T
Enjoy an array of Eggsperiences in Elmwood Park Community support makes all the difference at egg-focused eatery
C
MELISSA ELSMO Food Writer
ommunity support has been a key factor in Eggsperience’s ability to persevere during the pandemic. The popular breakfast and lunch spot, 16 Conti Parkway in Elmwood Park, started serving up hearty breakfast and lunch offerings on “The Circle” in 2018. Today the café endures because Elmwood Park’s village government and residents know the importance of supporting their lo-
cal restaurants. Ray Corona took over as manager of the diner in August 2021 but brought a wealth of experience to the job. Eggsperience has three suburban and three city locations and Corona had spent time working at several of them before landing in Elmwood Park. He brings five years of “eggsperience” to his management role. “Oh my! This neighborhood had been very welcoming,” said Corona passionately.
“Elmwood Park is very unique, and this community never lets us down.” Even when the restaurant seems slow Corona notes it can become busy in a snap. Employees from neighboring businesses, local government workers, and loyal regulars have kept Eggsperience going strong during the darkest days of the pandemic. Like many other establishments, Eggsperience is short staffed and Corona is pleased when customers are patient with his hardworking staff. He said matter-of-factly that some days they are getting through by the “grace of God.” Corona credits the eatery’s expansive menu and quality ingredients for the restaurant’s broad community appeal and repeat customers. “We worked on the menu very carefully so there is something there that will appeal to everyone’s tastes,” said Corona. “We study the community and what they like. We try and make an effort to please everyone.” Eggsperience has savory breakfast lovers covered whether they are looking for basic breakfasts or more elaborate skillets, omelets, and benedicts. Staff members are quick to recommend the corned beef hash to traditionalists. Rather than fry up the canned hash relied upon for convenience by many diners, Eggsperience offers only house-made, small-batch hash. Customers can taste a clear difference.
Flautas de Papa appear among the popular “south of the border” menu options at Eggsperience in Elmwood Park. All photos Melissa Elsmo
Berry Greek Yogurt Waffles feature imported Greek yogurt, fresh berries, bananas and local honey.
The Eggsperience Cracked Egg Burger is a house specialty! Cooked to order, this two handed sammy comes topped with smoked bacon, melted cheddar and a sunny side up egg.
Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
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Vegetarian delight: Greek Salad with house made vinaigrette brims with cucumbers, peppers, tomatoes, pepperoncini, red onion, kalamata olives and feta cheese.
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Small batch hash: Eggspereince’s housemade corned beef hash and eggs are sure to please diner-style breakfast fans. “Our corned beef hash is really special and very popular with our customers. We make it in small amounts so it is always fresh. Once it is gone our cook will make another small batch,” said Corona. South of the border specials, pancakes and biscuits and gravy are also popular selections. For those looking to make a healthier choice, Greek yogurt offerings are a standout at Eggsperience. Served on its own or as part of the berry Greek yogurt waffles, the flavorful homestyle yogurt is airy and tart. It pairs beautifully with fruit, oat granola, and a drizzle of local honey. Eggsperience also serves notable lunch offerings. Top quality burgers, including one that comes appropriately topped with an egg, and the generously sized salads are popular choices in the afternoon.
Though Eggsperience has temporarily stopped offering specials to combat rising food costs, Corona is eager to participate in Elmwood Park’s forthcoming restaurant week. From February 18-27 Eggsperience is offering their Rocky Mountain High Omelet with crispy hashbrowns and choice of toast for just $11.99. The dish boasts a classic combination of diced ham, green pepper, onion and shredded cheddar cheese. Eggsperience lunch lovers can also participate in the village supported event; for the same price diners can savor their best-selling avocado chicken sandwich and a cup of warming soup. “At the end of the day I am thankful people come to eat here every day,” said Corona. “We are a family business, and we want everyone to feel at home here.” When asked to pick his favorite item on the menu Corona said there were simply too many favorites to choose from at Eggsperience.
The Country Bennie at Eggsperience is an indulgent choice, but still has vegetarian allure. Poached eggs, Hollandaise sauce, fresh tomato, roasted red peppers and sautéed spinach perch atop a toasted English muffin.
For more culinary delights, visit OakPark.com and click on EATS.
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Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
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Lake and Lathrop gets 11 more days to finalize construction loan Construction on long delayed mixed-use project begins By ROBERT LIFKA Contributing Reporter
With construction of the Lake and Lathrop project finally under way, the River Forest village board has given the developer and its financial partner an 11-day extension to finalize a construction loan for the mixed-use building. Officials reached consensus in an executive session during the Jan. 24 village board meeting to grant the extension to Lake Lathrop Partners LLC and its financial partner, Wintrust Community Bank. Lake Lathrop Partners is a joint venture between Sedgwick Properties and Keystone Ventures. When officials ratified in October an ordinance approving the third amendment to the second amended and related redevelopment agreement, the developer was given until Jan. 23 to meet five specific requirements including obtaining construction financing. With the first pouring of concrete last week, the other four requirements were met. In reading a written statement regarding the decision, Village President Cathy Adduci said the request for the extension was related to complications associated with the
coronavirus pandemic that Wintrust Bank encountered. This project has been on the drawing board since before the village board approved in 2018 the proposal by Lake Lathrop Partners LLC to build a four-story, mixed-use development containing 22 condominium units and 14,000 square feet of retail space. Variations on the same project had lurched and lingered for a decade previously. The original project included another story and eight more units but was scaled back. The project experienced a series of delays over the years, including environmental cleanup from a dry cleaners formerly on the site and a lawsuit involving a tenant who did not want to move. “For the Lake and Lathrop development, the village board received a request from Lake Lathrop Partners and Wintrust Bank for an extension of time for Wintrust to close on the construction loan, through Feb. 4,” Adduci read from the written statement. “The developer met all of its bona fide construction requirements prior to the Jan. 23 deadline, except that Wintrust could not finalize and close on the loan due to Omicron and COVID delays. “The village board is willing to give Wintrust and the developer until Feb. 4 the opportunity
ALEX ROGALS/Staff Photographer
to close on the construction loan under the unique circumstances presented by the Omicron variant. If the Feb. 4 5 pm CST deadline is not met, the village administrator and village attorney are authorized to proceed with issuing a notice of default to the developer. The village board hopes and expects that this project will move forward as planned with this accommodation.” According to Kyle Haste, the development project manager for Sedgwick Properties, one of the developers, concrete was scheduled to be poured for five column pads on site Jan. 21. That followed rebar placement for the foundations that began the previous day and was scheduled to be completed Jan. 21. Earlier this month, in preparation for the deeper excavation work, the general contrac-
tor removed underground obstructions including two storage tanks once used to heat buildings on the site. These tanks had been previously identified but required no further environmental remediation on the site. Excavation began in December. Haste said no work had been delayed due to adverse weather conditions so far. Although Haste said sales traffic “continues to be strong,” no additional units have been sold since October, when developers said 14 had been sold. He said interest also is “strong” in the retail space. Developers said in October that a medical tenant has committed to taking 2,500 square feet of the retail space and that three others, two restaurants and another medical firm, had expressed serious interest.
River Forest traffic concerns addressed by board
Traffic study contract approved with consulting firm By ROBERT J. LIFKA Contributing Reporter
Continuing a recent trend, River Forest officials had traffic safety on their minds at the Jan. 24 village board meeting. Officials approved a revised contract for a traffic study in the northeast corner of the village and addressed traffic safety in two areas of the village, based on concerns expressed by residents to the Traffic and Safety Commission. Concerns expressed by resident Dave Karrow relate to the intersection of Vine Street and Ashland Avenue, and Ryan Bloecker’s concerns relate to the intersection of Keystone Avenue and Washington Street. In November, officials approved the original traffic study contract and, in December, action was taken to address other traffic safety concerns expressed by residents.
Officials voted unanimously at the Nov. 8 village board meeting to award a contract with Kenig, Lindgren, O’Hara, Alboona Inc. (KLOA) to conduct a traffic study in the area bounded by North Avenue, Harlem Avenue, Greenfield Street and Lathrop Avenue at a cost not to exceed $13,500. Although complaints about cut-through traffic in that section of the village have been received previously, the matter formally came to officials at the Oct. 11 village board meeting when resident Robert Armalas requested action. Jeff Loster, director of public works and development services, said in a memo that Armalas sought modifications to the proposed scope of work when it was posted. The more substantive modifications included a change in the number and locations of speed studies and an increase in hours of data capture, Loster said. The changes were made to more effectively address the concerns of the residents who live in that area and the anecdotal evidence that has been provided, he added. In recommendation approval of the re-
vised contract, Loster suggested that officials consider a village-wide traffic study, noting, “Things are a bit repetitive.” In response to a question from Trustee Bob O’Connell, Loster said such a study would incorporate findings from this study as well as the recently completed commuter parking study and the Safe Route to Schools study. Officials accepted Loster’s recommendation and voted unanimously to approve the revised contract with KLOA at a cost not to exceed $16,500. Findings are expected in 6-8 weeks. The village board agreed with the recommendation of the Traffic and Safety Commission and voted unanimously to install fourway stop signs at Vine and Ashland based on the concerns of Karrow, who also serves on the commission. The intersection is currently under two-way stop control with only drivers on Ashland required to stop. The village board addressed Bloecker’s concerns by voting unanimously to install a flashing crosswalk sign on the east leg of the intersection of Washington and Forest Avenue, which is one block east of Keystone.
According to Loster, commissioners shared Bloecker’s concerns regarding Washington and Keystone but did not support his request for curb bump outs there. In addition to installing the flashing crosswalk sign at Washington and Forest, commissioners discussed replacing two of the four stop signs at Washington and Keystone with flashing stop signs. Bloecker asked that the flashing stop signs not be installed but agreed with the flashing crosswalk sign. Loster said village staff members will work with commissioners on other potential solutions, noting that flashing stop signs at that intersection would be only for traffic on Washington. At the Dec. 13 village board meeting, trustees agreed with recommendations from the Traffic and Safety Commission to install a pole-mounted radar feedback sign on the west side of Thatcher Avenue near the intersection with Vine Street and install temporary knockdown bollards at the limits of the parking lanes in the eastbound/westbound directions of Chicago Avenue at the intersection with William Street.
Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
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ASSISTED LIVING • SHELTERED CARE • MEMORY CARE • SKILLED NURSING
Now safely moving new residents to our small, wooded campus.
A safe & smart choice. Choosing communityyou you Choosing aa community can trust has never been can trust has never been more important. more difficult. ALEX ROGALS/Staff Photographer
FINISHING TOUCHES: The west entrance at OPRF High School will house the student cafeteria.
D200 FINANCE
Reserves or debt or both? from page 1 In a separate interview with Wednesday Journal, Johnson said a debt certificate is a type of bond that relies “exclusively” on the district’s general operating funds to pay back. The district must factor in the certificate’s principal and interest in its budget. Debt certificates can be used to finance capital projects or purchase real property, Johnson said. “Five percent of debt can be paid back within six months and 85% within three years,” Johnson said. “Debt certificates work so that the school districts [can] utilize their existing financial resources to pay back the amount of the loan.” Alternatively, the DSEB bond is one that ultimately extends the property tax levy and impacts taxpayers, Johnson told the Journal. This kind of bond can also be issued without a referendum to help fund capital projects. “They [the DSEB bonds] would fall on our taxpayers immediately upon issuing, and so that really is the key difference between the two,” said Johnson. The timeline to pay back the borrowed amounts is also up for discussion. Board member Tom Cofsky said in a Journal interview that the time frame is contingent on the type of repairs and renovations planned. That means, if the district issued a debt certificate it would have to “spend the money” according to the guidelines or “you’re not going to qualify.” During the Jan. 13 meeting, board members parsed through the details of the debt options and inquired about the district’s current finances. Board member Ralph Martire asked a question about whether the district should use its considerable cash reserves to pay for facility projects or incur debt to offset the costs of the projects and alleviate the impact on residents’ taxes. “Is that a rational way to go?” Martire asked Grossi. “And that’s the legitimate discussion that started way back when,” Grossi responded.
“The district has a healthy fund balance, and it has an old building with a lot of needs, and a community that does not like taxation, which I agree with all that stuff.” “So, there’s a sweet spot that works. There’s no right or wrong answer. It’s a tough question,” said Grossi. The district funded the first phase of its fivepart capital improvement project by using its cash reserves, dropping the balance that once totaled about $115 million to roughly $80 million, Grossi said. Phase 1 of the district’s Imagine OPRF capital project cost close to $32.6 million. Construction for the first wave of renovation projects began in June 2020 and involved numerous renovations, including the school’s newly unveiled south cafeteria and student resource center. Updates to dozens of classrooms, the installation of eight all-gender bathrooms and remodeling of the student welcome center and student commons are also part of Phase 1, which is expected to be completed by August 2023. Johnson told the Journal that the district has about $96 million in cash reserves and that the school board has yet to finalize or approve the plans for Phase 2, which would likely encompass the maintenance projects and improvements which involve the school’s athletic facilities. Board members and district administrators plan to continue discussing their debt options in the coming weeks, as well as finalize upcoming projects, Johnson said. The district has created a finance committee, which will aid in conversations around debt options, and the board is expected to vote on a financing plan by the end of February, said Johnson. “The money in the bank is an asset of the community. The building is an asset of the community,” Grossi said during the Jan. 13 meeting. “In some ways, you have to view this as an asset-to-asset transfer. “It’s not just an expense per say. You’re taking the assets of cashing the bank, and you’re moving it to the assets of fixing this beautiful but old, needy building – with the goal of long term, very long-term fiscal stability and facility stability.”
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Chicago shooting victim in very serious condition
A juvenile from Chicago is in very serious condition after being shot multiple times by an unknown individual at 1:35 p.m., Jan. 15 in the 400 block of North Taylor Avenue. The juvenile was taken to Loyola Medical Center following the shooting. The Oak Park Police Department is investigating the incident, which Commander Paul Kane said he does not believe to be a random event. Kane was unable to provide more information at this time as he said giving out specific details could directly affect the investigation.
Unlawful use of weapon arrest Chicago resident Rachel Franklin, 23, was arrested 12:19 a.m., Jan. 21 in the 200 block of Harlem Boulevard after a witness identified her as the person who reportedly pulled out a handgun and was pushed out of a vehicle during a verbal altercation. An investigation found Franklin to be in possession of a loaded handgun without a concealed carry license. Felony unlawful use of weapon charges for Franklin were approved by the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office.
Hit-and-run arrest A Chicago resident was charged with a felony Jan. 16 for fleeing the scene of an acci-
dent that injured one pedestrian in the 1000 block of North Harlem Avenue. The resident was also found to have been driving under the influence and was also charged with a misdemeanor DUI. The resident was identified by a witness of the accident driving a vehicle with damage on its front end.
after police found a loaded handgun underneath her seat while the couple was stopped for a minor traffic violation at 1:34 a.m., Jan. 15 in the 900 block of North Austin Boulevard. The firearm was not discharged.
Aggravated carjacking arrest
A clerk at the 7-Eleven store at 240 Chicago Ave. thwarted a robbery by pulling out a knife on a male subject, who implied he had a handgun and demanded money at 4:19 a.m., Jan. 20. No loss was reported. The man was last seen traveling on foot eastbound on Chicago Avenue.
A 14-year-old male juvenile was charged with two counts of aggravated vehicular hijacking Jan. 20 for an incident that occurred in the first block of West Madison Street Aug. 2 and a second incident that occurred in the 900 block of South Oak Park Avenue Aug. 9. An investigation into the second incident identified the juvenile’s fingerprints and a security camera captured the act on film. He was processed and remains in custody at the Cook County Juvenile Temporary Detention Center, 1100 S. Hamilton Ave., Chicago.
Traffic and unlawful weapon possession arrest An Aurora man was charged for driving with a revoked license while his passenger also of Aurora, was charged with a misdemeanor count of unlawful use of weapon
Every Weekend Starting February 5th, 2022 We invite you to shop locally in Chicagos' Austin neighborhood. Fresh Produce, meat, baked goods and more.
Attempted robbery
Motor vehicle theft ■ A 2004 silver Lexus was removed from the 200 block of South Oak Park Avenue between 11:45 p.m., Jan. 20 and 9:40 a.m., Jan. 21. The estimated loss is $15,000. ■ A man saw his gray 2011 Chevy Malibu, which was left running with the keys in the ignition, being taken from outside the gas station he was inside in the 6100 block of North Avenue at 11:46 p.m., Jan. 21. The estimated loss is $7,000. ■ A black Dodge Durango, left running and unattended, was removed from the 800 block of South Maple Avenue at 9:28 p.m., Jan. 15. The vehicle was spotted traveling
eastbound on Interstate 290 by Oak Park police officers and was recovered a short time later in the 1900 block of South Pulaski Road in Chicago. The Durango was towed and processed for evidence before being returned to its owner.
Criminal property damage Someone threw eggs and rice on a gray 2004 Toyota Hatchback, damaging the vehicle’s paint, between 2 p.m., Jan. 14 and 3:18 p.m., Jan. 18 in the 900 block of Gunderson Avenue. The estimated damage is $200. The rear tires of a white 2018 Nissan Rogue were slashed between midnight, Jan. 16 and 11:30 a.m., Jan. 16 in the 400 block of North Austin Boulevard. These items, obtained from the Oak Park Police Department, came from reports through Jan. 17 to Jan. 24 and represent a portion of the incidents to which police responded. Anyone named in these reports has only been charged with a crime and cases have not yet been adjudicated. We report the race of a suspect only when a serious crime has been committed, the suspect is still at large, and police have provided us with a detailed physical description of the suspect as they seek the public’s help in making an arrest. Compiled by Stacey Sheridan
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Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
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SPORTS OPRF girls notch 3 titles as wrestlers cruise to tourney victory Huskies a favorite in first-ever IHSA state championships next month By MELVIN TATE Contributing Reporter
This season marks the first time that the Illinois High School Association has sanctioned girls’ wrestling as a sport, and the first-ever state tournament will take place Feb. 25-26 at Grossinger Motors Arena in Bloomington. The Oak Park and River Forest High School girls’ wrestling team is eager to compete for that first title. “It’s incredibly important because in Illinois,” said OPRF girls coach Fred Arkin, a. co-chairmen of the Illinois Wrestling Coaches and Officials Association steering committee, “there are seven colleges that have women’s wrestling teams and without an IHSA-sanctioned sport, our girls have been losing out on opportunities. Now, they’re getting
calls from college coaches, and they’ll have opportunities to compete at the next level.” OPRF, with a dual-meet record of 16-1 this year, is considered one of the favorites in the upcoming state tournament and showed why this weekend. After defeating Schaumburg High School -- the state’s top-ranked team -36-33 in a dual meet on Jan. 21, the Huskies won their own invitational the following day with 182 points. “For me, the season has gone well. I’ve learned a lot,” said OPRF senior Bentley Hills, who defeated Ariana Diaz of Morton to claim the 100-pound title and improve to 123. “I’m very excited about state and think we have a chance of winning.” The Huskies had three individual champions at their Jan. 22 invitational: Hills, sophomore Sarah Ephstein (235 pounds) and senior Tiffany White (190 pounds), who pinned one of the state’s top wrestlers, Noelia Vazquez of Fenton High School, while improving to 16-0 for the season. “I continued to push and didn’t stop,” said White, who along with sophomore Trinity White, are the sisters of OPRF boys legend
ALEX ROGALS/Staff Photographer
OPRF’s Bentley Hills (right) squares off against Ariana Diaz of Morton during the 100-pound championship match at the Jan. 22 OPRF Invite. Hills won the contest, giving her a 12-3 record this season for the Huskies. Isaiah White. “A lot of the girls are new, and they come to these tournaments and fight their butts off. They’re really good.” Other top wrestlers for the OPRF girls include senior Camila Neuman at 110 pounds, senior Maria Diaz at 120, senior Bella Tyma at 135, junior Keydy Peralta at 145 and sophomore Tamera Erving at 235. All placed in the top four at the Huskie Invitational, with Neuman (16-1) taking her first loss of the year in the title match against Ariana Flores of Evanston Township High School. “We just need to keep developing the way we’ve been,” Arkin said. “They have been doing real well and their aggressiveness has come up. We’ve got some technique issues that we’ve got to clean up a bit, and we’ve got to fight and battle. That’s our plan for the next three weeks before the [state] tournament: stay healthy and work on hard, aggressive wrestling.”
Dunson takes boys 120-pound title at OPRF Invite
ALEX ROGALS/Staff Photographer
OPRF senior Jalen Dunson (right) locks up his freshman teammate, Joseph Knackstedt, en route to the 120-pound title at the OPRF Invite on Jan. 22 in Oak Park. Dunson, who is 14-1 this season, is looking to advance deep into the postseason next month.
The OPRF boys’ wrestling program is usually among the state’s finest. This year, however, is a bit different as the Huskies are working in several talented but inexperienced newcomers. While the results generally haven’t been what OPRF is accustomed to, there have been some standout efforts this season. Senior Jalen Dunson has had a solid season and improved his record to 14-1 while claim-
ing the 120-pound title at the Huskie Invitational with a victory over his teammate, freshman Joe Knackstedt. “It was fun. We practice against each other every day,” said Dunson. “My season’s been pretty good, but I’d like to have had more matches by now. But I think it’s been good, and I’m setting myself up to be in a good position for state.” Being a freshman on a varsity team can be a challenge, but Knackstedt (7-3) is grateful for the opportunity to be among the Huskies’ main wrestlers. “It’s nice because I can hop between different levels,” he said. “Some days I’ll wrestle on the freshman or JV levels, and other days on the varsity. It allows me to get a lot of matches in and gives me more experience.” OPRF has also had some good moments as a team. One of those came Jan. 21 as the Huskies rallied from a late deficit to defeat visiting York in a dual meet 32-30, with Allyn Johnson clinching things with a pin. “The team’s super young, but we’ve been getting better every day,” Dunson said. “Right now, we’re just worried about effort, that’s all it’s ever been about.” With the IHSA regional tournaments starting Feb. 5, Dunson and Knackstedt want to be at their best when that time comes. “I qualified for sectionals two years ago,” said Dunson. “I’ve got to keep doing what I’ve been doing, which starts by working hard in practice.” “I need to work on my offense during matches, instead of just responding to my opponent,” added Knackstedt.
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Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
@ @OakPark
Fenwick’s comeback win stuns RBHS boys Friars erase 19-point deficit, holds Bulldogs to 7 in second half
By MELVIN TATE Contributing Reporter
Fenwick High School boys basketball senior forward Brett Bohaboy was hoping to finally defeat neighborhood rival RiversideBrookfield High School in his career. So it came as no surprise when he erupted with joy after his put-back basket with time expiring gave the host Friars a dramatic come-from-behind 38-36 victory over the Bulldogs on Jan. 22. “I just tried to get the rebound [off a T.J. Stephenson miss]. I threw it up and it went in,” said Bohaboy, who finished with seven points and five rebounds. “It feels great. We lost to [RBHS] twice in the summer, but we beat them in the regular season and that’s all that matters.” “I feel real happy for our guys,” said Fenwick coach Toby Young. “Tonight, we did the right things. They listened and executed on offense and it worked out. It’s good to see them have success doing things the right way, and now they can continue to believe and buy in.” Fenwick (6-8) got off to a slow start against RBHS (14-4), trailing 19-5 after the opening quarter. With 3:46 left in the first half, the
Friars found themselves staring at a 29-10 deficit. But sparked by good defense, the Friars went on a 13-0 run during the second and third quarters to climb back into the game. “It all started on the defensive end,” Bohaboy said. “We got a few stops in a row and then the ball started going in for us.” Fenwick freshman forward Nate Marshall, who was a key contributor at defensive end during the football team’s run to the IHSA Class 5A title in the fall, gave the Friars a boost with 14 points and five rebounds. “Even when we were down, we still had enough energy to come back,” said Marshall. “The toughness [from football] helps me in the paint.” “Nate is a load to deal with down low,” Young said. “The biggest thing for him is being physical and staying on the court. As he continues to grow and his skills develop, we’re looking for huge things from him.” The Friars trailed 32-26 after three quarters and kept chipping away in the fourth, taking a 36-34 lead on a Marshall basket with 3:28 remaining. The Bulldogs’ Will Gonzalez tied the game on a driving layup with 39 second left. Fenwick called its final timeout to set up a play,
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and senior guard T.J. Stephenson (5 points) drove inside in the closing seconds. His pullup jumper missed, but Bohaboy grabbed the rebound and scored as time expired. “This win skyrockets our confidence,” Marshall said. Joevonn McCottry had 11 points and J.P. Hanley eight for RBHS, which managed only seven points on two field goals in the second half. The Bulldogs shot just 29 percent (11-of-38) against Fenwick. “Give Fenwick credit, they guarded really well and took us out of what we wanted to
do offensively,” said RBHS coach Mike Reingruber. “We didn’t get into any rhythm in the second half.” Young hopes such a dramatic win can give his young Friars a boost in self-belief and confidence. “We’re growing individually and as a team, and the more that we play with and trust each other, we’ll be all right,” he said. “This was a team win that was much needed; everyone did what they were supposed to do, and they see what they can accomplish when they do things the right way.”
OPRF bowlers get nod to compete in state series Intramural Huskies given first shot at sanctioned competition By MELVIN TATE Contributing Reporter
Oak Park and River Forest High School does not have a school-sponsored bowling program. But James Geovanes, OPRF’s intramural director, has been trying to get one started. “We’ve never had a team, and every time we would go to [former athletic director] John Stelzer and say that we could put independent kids in [the IHSA tournament], it was a shut door,” he said. “[New OPRF Athletic Director] Nicole Ebsen came in and gave us an opportunity, and we ran with it. We’re not registered with the IHSA, but what we can do is if there are individuals that want to bowl in the state tournament, we can enlist them.” With that in mind, Geovanes took the top five boys and top five girls from the intramural bowling program and submitted them as independents. The boys are coached by Richard Short and the girls by Melody Brown. Three of the boys -- sophomore William Zeiser and juniors Jackson Davis and Payton Wernet -- competed in the Glenbard East Sectional on Jan. 22. Though none of them qualified for the state finals, Geovanes was proud of how they acquitted themselves. “We had no expectations because we didn’t know what we were getting ourselves into,” he said. “To get three guys into the sectional was quite an accomplishment. Payton is a nationally ranked
junior bowler and did a nice job, as did Jackson and William. Next year, we’ll know how it works and we’ll keep getting better.” Another top bowler, Kelby Gray, is better known for his play on the OPRF football team. “He would have competed at the sectional, but he was away signing his letter of intent to play college football,” said Geovanes of Gray, who committed to South Dakota. “He’s an awesome bowler.” The IHSA girls state tournament begins Feb. 5 with regional play, and the five OPRF students taking part are Corrine Arquette, Margaret Dean, Alyssa Hasapis, Audrey Maidlow and Gracie Maidlow. “All five competed against 35 other girls for those spots. We’re really excited for them to be the first to compete at the IHSA series for OPRF,” Geovanes said. If the number of bowlers in OPRF’s intramural program continues to grow at a sustainable rate, Geovanes believes there’s a possibility the school will eventually sanction bowling as an official sport. “After the season is over, we’re all going to sit down and have a conversation to see where the future is,” he said. “We’ll see how it goes.”
Fenwick boys 15th at sectionals The Fenwick High School boys bowling team knocked down 5,438 pins to place 15th at the Glenbard East Sectional on Jan. 22, ending their season. Junior James Dubanowich had the Friars’ top individual series with a score of 1,197 pins, while Zachary Jakatis had the team’s high game, rolling a 252.
January 26, 2022 19
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January 26, 2022
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Mid-year New singers welcome! www.promusicayouthchorus.com
GET OUT THERE!
Singing brings joy to children and their families
lla Fitzgerald said the only thing better than singing is more singing — and MORE SINGING is what we’ve been doing at Pro Musica for more than thirty years — helping young people grow, learn, and experience real joy through singing together. There is no better time to be a part of a chorus. Making music together offers much-needed warmth and comfort, and we take COVID precautions seriously so that our singers know that they’re as safe as possible. Last year, we bundled up for outdoor rehearsals, sang from our bedrooms in Zoom rehearsals, and made video-editing experts out of our artistic staff. This year, we cautiously returned to in-person rehearsals and performances, with enthusiastic kids, supportive parents, and dedicated staff. Being live and in-person is exactly what we need, and hearing these kids sing their way out the door following rehearsal is an absolute joy. Choral singing has a tremendous and positive impact on well-being. Got
Scan the QR code for upcoming joining events or find us online
Troop16oakpark.com Troop16@gmail.com
Troop 16 Oak Park
an anxious kid at home? Send them our way! Singing brings joy to the singers, the listeners, and the parents — who can stand back and bask for a moment, seeing their children find a second home in the chorus, embrace vulnerability by being safely part of a group, and simply have fun with friends. Pro Musica is a community-based non-profit group of singers in 2nd grade through high school. We offer a performance-based program that teaches musical skills, promotes poise and personal responsibility, and develops teamwork and leadership through singing a variety of repertoire from challenging classical works to Broadway tunes. To experience unique performance opportunities and high quality vocal education, come sing with us! Midyear enrollment is open, and no experience is necessary —visit www. promusicayouthchorus.org or email pmyouthchorus@gmail.com. Sing on!
Not many youth organizations in Oak Park can say they’ve been around since 1916 Boy Scout Troop 16 is one of them
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Now looking for boys in 5th, 6th, & 7th grade HIKING! FISHING! SUMMER CAMP!
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ur core mission, and that of Scouts, B.S.A., has not changed much over the years. Character development of young men through a robust, boy-lead outdoor program of camping, hiking, fishing, and more. “The boys decide what to do and where to go. It’s always been like that and it will always be like that,” says current scoutmaster and Troop 16 alum Andrew Lennie. What’s enabled our success is a continuity in leadership. In the last 38 years, the Troop has had just 4 Scoutmasters. “We have a very committed group of trained volunteer adults who take pride in helping deliver a safe and effective program,” says assistant scoutmaster Andrew Campbell. Troop 16 meets most Friday nights during the school year (unless we’re camping) from 7:30-9:00pm at the home of our longtime sponsoring organization, First United Church of Oak Park, 848 Lake Street.
Key to the success is the outdoor program. The Troop camps 11 months a year, including weekend trips to state parks, weeks-long sleep-away camp experiences, and “high adventure” treks to the Boundary Waters, Colorado, and even Alaska. “Spending time in outdoors has been shown to improve attention span, lower stress, reduce obesity, and increase empathy and cooperation,” says Dr. Chris Clardy, a Troop 16 assistant Scoutmaster and local pediatrician. If you want your son to experience the great outdoors, learn leadership skills, and become a better citizen, there is no better choice the the Boy Scout program as carried out by Troop 16. The Troop is currently looking for boys in 5th, 6th, and 7th grade to join and has several events upcoming where boys and parents can find out more information; including a home made ice cream night, a “Day at the Dunes,” and a kickball and coffee event. A list of those events is at www.Troop16OakPark.com.
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Ascension School Enriches Minds, Bodies and Souls
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or over 110 years, Ascension has provided an excellent Catholic education in the spirit of love, kindness and respect. Our community supports and understands the value of Catholic education and is dedicated to the academic, social and spiritual growth of our children. Our goal is to create a positive atmosphere where students can grow in a safe, challenging and faith-filled learning environment.
To support the ever-changing technology needs, every classroom has access to iPads and chrome books. Students of every age are also exposed to comprehensive STEM opportunities. Beginning in preschool, Ascension encourages every child to think deeply about the world around them. In the 2021 – 2022 school year, Ascension School was proud to be recognized as a Museum of Science and Industry School Partner.
Ascension School believes that children deserve a well-rounded education that enriches their minds, bodies and souls. Ascension provides outstanding fine and performing arts programs and extracurricular athletic programs that promote teamwork, community and inclusion.
Come and learn about what Ascension School can offer your child at our Catholic Schools Week Open House on January 30th from 11:30am to 1:00pm or make an appointment for a private tour at https:// school.ascensionoakpark.com.
With an average student to teacher ratio of 13:1, our faculty has the opportunity to work with our students individually to help them achieve their academic goals. The Ascension faculty and staff understands that students learn and develop in different ways and they strive to support their student’s needs.
Ascension School offers both full and half-day programs for our preschool children. The preschooler’s day focuses on socialization, reading readiness and literacy skills, small motor and large motor development and learning independence. Ascension School also has an Extended Day Program which offers before school and after school care for our preschool to grade 8 students.
Looking for a Local Preschool? Start Here
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reschool is very beneficial to young children. Children who attend a high-quality preschool program are prepared for kindergarten not only academically, but social-emotionally, too. They learn how to play with others, share, and become accustomed to school routines that make the adjustment to kindergarten easier so that little ones can focus on the work of learning and growing.
The Collaboration for Early Childhood’s online Early Childhood Resource Directory is great place to start learning about local preschools. You can search for local programs by age and a variety of other criteria. Don’t forget the map at the bottom of the page to view a visual layout of where programs are located in relation to you to make pick-up and drop-off trips easy.
Oak Park and River Forest provide free, high-quality preschool to children whose families meet eligibility criteria such as veteran status, income level, disabilities or developmental delays. Prescreening for publicly funded preschool that begins this fall opens on February 1 and is ongoing. To learn more about publicly funded preschool, visit our website at www. collab4kids.org. The Collaboration supports children 0-5 and the people who care for them. We are here to get you connected to information, the parenting community, and programs to support your child’s healthy development and growth. Start strong. Start with us!
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E D U C AT I O N & E N R I C H M E N T G U I D E
January 26, 2022
Grace Lutheran School offers a challenging curriculum in a nurturing environment
Grace Lutheran School 7300 Division Street ▪︎ River Forest ▪︎ 708-366-6900
Faith ▪︎ Academics ▪︎ Character Early Childhood, age 3 to 5
▪︎ All-day kindergarten ▪︎ Half-day and full-day programs for
3- and 4-year olds ▪︎ We learn about God’s love!
Elementary, Grades 1–8
▪︎ Caring, experienced teachers ▪︎ Challenging curriculum ▪︎ Support for individual learning needs ▪︎ Music, art, and sports teams ▪︎ Before and after-school care available
Learn more at GraceSchoolRF.org
Open House Sunday, January 30, 1–2:30 pm
Schedule a visit Call 708-366-6901
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race Lutheran School, at the corner of Division and Bonnie Brae in River Forest, serves children from age three through eighth grade. The curriculum combines rigorous academics with faith-based learning and worship. Our robust arts and athletics programs immerse students in music, sports, and visual arts. As children learn from many points of view they grow in compassion and creativity. We are committed to providing opportunities to discover and celebrate diversity and make our school a place where every child feels a sense of belonging. Grace offers a full-day kindergarten program and morning classes for threeand four-year-olds, with an optional afternoon program. In grades 1-8, a strong core curriculum challenges children academically, while the school’s supportive environment and high expectations help students achieve their best. A resource teacher and part-time reading specialist provide small-group and individual instruction for
children who need additional supports. Grace School students consistently perform above national averages on standardized tests, and Grace grads succeed at competitive area high schools in the city and suburbs. Sports teams are open to all interested participants in grades 5-8. The track and cross country teams include third and fourth graders. Extended care is available until 6 p.m. Before-school care opens at 7 a.m. Grace School is hosting an open house for prospective families on Sunday, January 30, 1:00 to 2:30 p.m. It’s an opportunity for parents of elementary and preschool-age children to tour the building and talk with teachers, the principal, and parents of current Grace students. The school is currently accepting applications for the 2022-23 academic year. For more information come to the open house, call the school office (708366-6900), or visit www.GraceSchoolRF. org.
The St. Luke School Difference
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t. Luke School has been providing families an excellent, Catholic education since 1921. We are proud of our 100 year legacy and look forward to educating children for generations to come.
Open House
Sunday, January 30, 10:30 am – 12:30 pm
Now accepting applications for all programs, including half and full day preschool and full day kindergarten through 8th grade.
St. Luke School
519 Ashland Avenue, River Forest 708-366-8587 www.school-stlukeparish.org facebook.com/slsbearcats
At St. Luke, each child is encouraged to learn at their own pace led by teachers who are highly experienced and credentialed. We provide a rigorous curriculum that challenges our students to reach new heights in both their creative thinking and academic skills. These high expectations in the classroom lead to matriculation to top high schools where our graduates excel. Our graduates leave as young, independent leaders filled with academic confidence, spirituality, and a sense of service. Complementing our exceptional education, St. Luke offers: • Full and half day preschool, along with full day kindergarten through 8th grade • Teacher-led, differentiated curriculum in a nurturing environment
• Fine Arts program includes music, art, social-emotional learning, PE, and Spanish
• Meaningful use of integrated technology
• Small, caring community which promotes kindness
• No-cut athletics and extracurricular opportunities • Affordable extended day program before and after school
We focus on the values of faith, hope, love, and community. Teachers bring these values into class each day to give children daily opportunities to learn, share, and understand their faith and role in society. Service projects push our students to expand their world view and grow their appreciation of community life and service for others while also being challenged to think critically for real-life problem solving. Learning goes beyond the classroom as our students participate in a wide variety of extracurricular activities, including speech club, art club, and a variety of musical programs. St. Luke School’s preparation of responsible, life-long learners, nurturing environment and exceptional education make it an unparalleled choice. We invite you to come and experience the St. Luke difference. Visit www.school-stlukeparish. org to learn more.
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District 90 Welcomes Kindergarten and New Students to the 2022-23 School Year
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o you have or know of a child who will turn five years old on or before September 1, 2022? If the answer is yes, River Forest District 90 is excited to be registering children for Kindergarten who turn five years of age on or before that date. Students must reside in the Village of River Forest. The District now processes all Kindergarten and new student registrations electronically. Families registering students in District 90 for the first time are asked to contact Josephine Ribaudo, District Registrar, at (708)7718282 to begin the registration process. During your telephone call, she will explain the online registration process and provide you with a specific link for your student(s). Families who have a student already attending a District 90 school should also contact Ms. Ribaudo to begin the Kindergarten registration process. We encourage all families with children eligible for Kindergarten this
year to register as early as possible. Doing so enables District and Building Administrators to make critical decisions about staffing, the number of morning and afternoon sessions, and other matters. Starting the registration process also provides families with additional time to make all the necessary appointments that are required for students to attend school, such as medical, dental, and eye exams. For additional information about registering for Kindergarten in District 90, please visit the District’s website at Kindergarten Registration (www. district90.org/about/kindergartenregistration). Please share this information with any of your friends, neighbors, or relatives who may have a Kindergarten-aged child or may know of such a child in the community. School will start for students on Monday, August 22, 2022. Welcome to District 90 and Kindergarten!
Parents Against Child Sex Abuse Educates Parents with its Curriculum
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ith the COVID 19 pandemic contributing to the rise of child exploitation, Parents Against Child Sex Abuse (PAXA) has witnessed the need for greater resources for child protection. Every day, PAXA hears from parents asking for guidance and how they can help against sexual abuse, making this a collective mission for all parents. Child sexual abuse itself is a wavering topic that is often left out of the conversation, producing misconceptions and false narratives. However, these misunderstandings can be eliminated through education and guidance. According to the Child Molestation & Prevention Institute, 95% of sexual abuse is preventable through education. For this reason, PAXA developed various programs that make child protection accessible and approachable. Our latest program, P.A.X.A. Pointers Curriculum, is rooted in targeting scenarios to keep children safe from
close-in predators. In over 90% of circumstances, a child is being sexually abused by someone they know (source: CDC), making it a priority to start sexual abuse prevention measures at home. “Education is the first step towards prevention and the P.A.X.A. Pointers Curriculum offers parents the power to be the first-line defense to protect our children.” PAXA Board Director and Oak Park resident, Joel Foster. The Curriculum’s Resource Guide includes topics from babysitters to online safety, offering parents insights about how to prevent child sexual abuse in present-day circumstances. The Curriculum can also be enhanced with virtual or in-person presentation options that can be of further help to individuals, parent groups, churches, and congregations. Parents can get started by purchasing a PAXA Pointers Curriculum Resource Guide ($20) via the website:www.paxa. online
January 26, 2022 23
River Forest Community Center U C AT I O N & E N R I C H M E N T G U I D E 24EJanuary 26, 2022 arly Childhood LearningE DC enter Re ivrerFo Forreesstt C Co m m uu nintyity CeC nteen r ter RRiiv o m m ver Forest Community Center Early Childhood earning enter &C Full-Day: yC rLneinagrn Cienng terCenter EEaarrlly ChhilidlhdohoodoL deaLHalf-Day Preschool & Pre-K
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Join the fun in the Early Childhood Program at the River Forest Community Center!
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he River Forest Community Center provides an age-appropriate curriculum designed to encourage positive group interaction as well as foster individual growth. Our teachers thrive on creating a safe and fun learning environment through play in which children are encouraged to explore and develop their cognitive, language, social-intellectual and motor skills. Our mission is to provide a hands-on approach to learning which allows the children to explore their environment while enhancing their social, emotional, cognitive and motor development. Classes start as young as 15 months of age. The Early Childhood Programs include: • Munchkins • Playschool • Preschool (Half-Day & Full-Day) • Pre-Kindergarten (Half-Day & Full-Day)
• Before & After School Programs The River Forest Community Center is located at 8020 Madison Street in River Forest. For more information about the Early Childhood Programs, call 708-771-6159.
An exceptional Montessori education in Oak Park for over 30 years
W
est Suburban Montessori School has been providing an exceptional Montessori education in Oak Park for over 30 years. We value kindness, hard work, and the spark or enthusiasm required for real learning to take place. The children who attend WSMS are on a path toward independence. Our graduates are confident, strong minded, outside of the box thinkers. They are kind, respectful, and curious. West Suburban Montessori School embodies the educational principles established by Dr. Maria Montessori (1870-1952), an Italian physician who dedicated her career to the study of children. Following Dr. Montessori’s guidance, we focus on the whole child at WSMS, including the intellectual, physical, emotional, social, and spiritual development of the child. • Montessori environments have mixed ages: Primary (ages 3-6), Lower Elementary (ages 6-9), and Upper Elementary (ages 9-12)
• Children actively engage in their learning. The guide gives lessons to the student, and the student continues the work independently. • Hands on learning happens in Montessori environments. The Montessori materials are made to be touched and manipulated. • Montessori students have freedom of movement. Movement is vital for all children. • An AMI credentialed guide in each classroom is key. Montessori guides focus on redirection, honest conversation, and encouragement of their students. • Uninterrupted work cycles are paramount to Montessori classrooms. Students work at their own pace, learn to concentrate deeply, and develop interests in a full range of subject areas. West Suburban Montessori School is accredited by the Association Montessori International (AMI) to educate children from 3 to 12 years of age.
Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
NEED TO REACH US?
oakpark.com/real-estate email: buphues@wjinc.com
25
Homes
Different villages, new renovations, same price point Move-in ready homes all listed at around $700,000
By LACEY SIKORA
T
Contributing Reporter
he villages of Oak Park, River Forest and Forest Park are about as neighborly as they come. They share Harlem Avenue and Madison Street, grocery stores and restaurants, and their housing stock is made up of vintage homes, new construction and multifamily buildings. A glimpse into some recent real estate listings around the $700,000 price point shows what your money can get you in each town if you’re looking for a newly renovated space. In Forest Park, Baird and Warner broker Monica Klinke is listing 447 Hannah Ave. for $699,900. She says of the four-bedroom, 4.5-bathroom house, “It’s a little bit different from what you usually see in Forest Park. Everyone who walks in says, ‘Oh wow. I didn’t expect this.’ This house was built to entertain.” The house was built around 1908 and rehabbed top to bottom in 2016. The renovation brought the house into the twenty first century. “The most interesting thing about this house is that it’s so contemporary,” Klinke said. “It has a little more of that urban, city feeling. It also has so many luxurious features.” In the living room, a coffered ceiling and sleek fireplace with a surround of white brick and salvaged wood set the room apart. The new kitchen has a large center island, a pot filler over the range, two sinks and a wine chiller. See MOVE-IN READY on page 28
447 Hannah Ave., Forest Park
PROVIDED BY BAIRD AND WARNER REALTOR MONICA KLINKE
The living room of 447 Hannah Ave. in Forest Park sports a coffered ceiling and a sleek gas fireplace.
PROVIDED BY BAIRD AND WARNER REALTOR MONICA KLINKE
PROVIDED BY BAIRD AND WARNER REALTOR MONICA KLINKE
The kitchen of 447 Hannah Ave. has high-end appliances, including a wine chiller and a refrigerator with a built-in Keurig coffee maker.
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Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
OAKPARK.COM | RIVERFOREST.COM
NEW YEAR!
NEW HOME!
FIND YOUR VICTORIAN TREASURE!
139 S GROVE, OAK PARK :: $1,179,000 :: 6 BED :: 4.5 BATH Majestic Victorian in central Oak Park Historic District.
KATHY & TONY IWERSEN 708.772.8040 708.772.8041 tonyiwersen@atproperties.com
Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
OAKPARK.COM | RIVERFOREST.COM
27
WE’RE BY YOUR SIDE 1104 S Humphrey Ave Oak Park | $729,000 Roman Lewis
447 Hannah Ave Forest Park | $699,900 Monica Klinke
310 N Cuyler Ave Oak Park | $649,900 Patricia McGowan
746 Gunderson Ave Oak Park | $619,900 Mary Carlin
631 Marengo Ave Forest Park | $525,000 Cathy Yanda
2521 Nelson Sq Westchester | $490,000 Bethanny Alexander
255 South Blvd #2 Oak Park | $385,000 Saretta Joyner
824 N Ridgeland Ave Oak Park | $375,000 Edwin Wald
909 Marengo Ave Forest Park | $329,900 Roman Lewis
7737 Taylor St Forest Park | $299,000 Catherine Simon-Vobornik
134 22nd Ave Bellwood | $280,000 Porchia Cooper
7712 Harvard St Forest Park | $265,000 Kevin Kirby
1539 Franklin Ave #1 River Forest | $259,900 Mary Carlin
1176 S Harvey Ave Oak Park | $240,000 Amy Harris
1128 N Harlem Ave Unit C River Forest | $235,900 Patricia McGowan
426 S Lombard Ave #306 Oak Park | $215,000 Cathy Yanda
1040 Ontario St #2G Oak Park | $175,000 Catherin Simon-Vobornik
48 N Menard Ave Unit B-G Chicago | $125,000 The Dita Group
4309 W Gladys Ave Chicago | $115,000 Toya Pendleton
7231 Randolph St #1B Forest Park | $61,650 William Geldes
Baird & Warner Oak Park/River Forest | 1037 Chicago Ave. Oak Park, IL 60302 | 708.697.5900 | oakpark.bairdwarner.com Source: BrokerMetrics® LLC, 1/1/2019 - 12/ 31/2019Detached and Attached only. Chicagoland PMSA
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Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
OAKPARK.COM | RIVERFOREST.COM
COURTESY OF REDFIN
Built in 1912, the house at 934 Gunderson Ave. (above) in Oak Park has been gutted and rehabbed. The open chef ’s kitchen (top right) has a Bertazzoni range and a quartz-topped counter and island. One of the home’s 3.5 bathrooms (bottom right) has an oversized walk-in shower.
MOVEIN READY High-end rehabs from page 25 The refrigerator even has a built-in Keurig coffee maker -- a feature that Klinke says she’s never seen before. The first floor also includes a bedroom with an en suite bathroom, which makes for great guest space or aging-in-place opportunities. Upstairs, there are three more bedrooms, each with their own bathroom. Klinke calls the primary suite spectacular, calling it “like something that Kim Kardashian would have.” She says of the primary suite’s bathroom, “It’s a level of luxury that you don’t see with million-dollar homes in this area.” On top of all-new electrical, plumbing and HVAC, the house also features great outdoor space with a wraparound porch, an outdoor kitchen and room for multiple seating areas. “This house has all the good stuff that is hard to find in this area,” Klinke said. “They really put careful thought into what people want today.” In Oak Park, a rehabbed home at 934 Gunderson Ave. is on the market for $709,900. Built in 1912, the home was recently gutted and rehabbed. It comes with a new 2.5-car garage. The four-bedroom, 3.5-bathroom house sits on a double lot across the street from Rehm Pool and offers a welcoming front porch. On
the first floor, the living room includes a gas fireplace. The open chef ’s kitchen comes with a Bertazzoni range, custom cabinets, a wine fridge, blue subway tile and quartz countertops with a quartz waterfall-sided island. Upstairs, the primary suite includes a luxurious bathroom with an oversized shower and soaking tub. Two more bedrooms share a new bathroom. The finished basement includes a den, fourth bedroom and another full bathroom. There are laundry facilities on the second floor and in the basement. Outside, the home has a new patio with built-in fire pit. In River Forest, a three-bedroom, 2.5-bathroom condominium at the 1970s era Valencia, 1005 Bonnie Brae Place, is for sale for $685,000. Unit 4E in the building has been recently renovated and comes with two heated parking spaces. The living room features an electric fireplace as the focal point. There is new flooring throughout the unit, including a cork acoustical underlay to provide a sense of quiet throughout the home. There is prefinished engineered flooring in the living spaces and new carpet in the bedrooms. “My developer has created an open living area, not experienced anywhere else in this complex, with high end tastefully modern finishes. We are competing with the new builds, priced closer to $1,000,000, but we are substantially more affordable and ready to deliver now where others haven’t broken ground yet,” says Tom Carraher, the listing agent from the Gagliardo Group/Compass.
“This project is perfect for someone downsizing who still desires to stay in the River Forest area.” The kitchen includes quartz countertops and white “no-slam” cabinets. The appliances are stainless steel and there is room for a breakfast area. The primary bedroom includes a newly renovated bathroom with a large shower with built-in bench seating. Two other bedrooms share a new bathroom, and there is a powder room for guests. Throughout the unit, the closets are spa-
cious and there is in-unit laundry as well. Outdated stereotypes about the three villages may hold that River Forest has the more luxurious houses, Forest Park is more modest and Oak Park falls somewhere in between. Those stereotypes are starting to change, says Klinke, pointing to the luxurious finishes on her Forest Park listing. The three listings range from roughly 2,200 to 2,800 square feet, are listed within $25,000 of each other, and each has been carefully renovated to appeal to today’s buyer.
COURTESY REDFIN
The kitchen inside the renovated condo unit at 1005 Bonnie Brae Place in River Forest also has quartz countertops and no-slam white cabinets.
Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
OAKPARK.COM | RIVERFOREST.COM
830 ASHLAND AVENUE, RIVER FOREST
830ASHLAND.INFO
639 N RIDGELAND AVENUE, OAK PARK
639NRIDGELAND.INFO
Beautiful River Forest Estate features a wonderfully detailed stone and brick
This freshly painted, spectacular home located in beautiful north Oak Park
exterior, leading into a timeless interior. $1,995,000
is enormous and has everything today’s buyer wants.
DAN HALPERIN
CAREN CHESSICK
•
708.848.0200
•
danhalperin@atproperties.com
•
708.848.0200
•
$799,900
carenchessick@atproperties.com
1011 SOUTH BOULEVARD
209 S EUCLID AVENUE, OAK PARK
209SOUTHEUCLID.INFO
7826 MADISON STREET, RIVER FOREST
7826MADISON26.INFO
Extra large, welcoming front porch has room for a table to enjoy views of
Architect-owned and re-imagined in River Forest at The Promenade of
this vibrant, center of town location.
River Forest.
HASEMAN/CURRAN
•
$765,000
708.606.8896
•
greer.gps@atproperties.com
KIM KERBIS
$524,700 •
312.339.1849
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kimkerbis@atproperties.com
Stop looking, start finding® atproperties.com
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Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
OAKPARK.COM | RIVERFOREST.COM
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VIEWPOINTS
Reimagining our response to violence
A
t the Tuesday, Jan. 18, village board meeting, the Police Chief LaDon Reynolds provided an update on the village’s response to Southwest Oak Park residents’ concerns about an increase in violence in their neighborhood. I believe our residents, and understand their fear about an increase in violence in their neighborhood. But I also believe the village must reimagine how we think about and respond to these acts of violence. At Tuesday’s board meeting, there were many statements made by Chief Reynolds that were deeply concerning to me. He discussed, as one of the measures taken, the purchase of a new camera system touting it as a tool that “helps solve crime.” Additionally, the chief described a new policy, implemented within the last six months, where residents can call and report the license plates of drivers they deem to be driving recklessly. The police will send a letter to these drivers notifying them that they are being “observed.” The board has neither reviewed, received prior notice about, nor had the opportunity to debate and vote on the implementation of these new policies or technologies. The camera system purchase is apparently below the monetary threshold required to trigger a board review. Residents should think very critically about the use of carceral technology deployed to “help solve crime.” The aforementioned technology, Flock Safety, is an automated license plate reader (ALPR) that uses machine learning to categorize vehicles and, indirectly, drivers, thereby “enhancing” Flock’s database and making it more searchable. ALPRs are essentially neighborhood watch devices designed to track the movement of anyone coming into and leaving Oak Park. This carceral surveillance technology will invariably impact people who are already disproportionately targeted by Oak Park police. This village board has yet to address the serious issues that have been raised by ROYAL and Freedom to Thrive Oak Park organizers. FOIA data shows that Black youth are disproportionately targeted in field stops by Oak Park police. Publicly available Illinois traffic-stop data shows that Black drivers are also disproportionately targeted by Oak Park police. The use of Flock’s ALPRs will only exacerbate this problem. Additionally, reports have shown that local ALPR data from other municipalities has been shared with Customs and Border Patrol and ICE. So not only is the initial surveillance an issue, but the resulting database targets our undocumented neighbors as well. As an abolitionist, while I understand our resident’s fears, I cannot agree to the use of carceral technology that doesn’t actually “solve crime,” but instead places Black and Brown people at greater risk of racial profiling by their neighbors and the police. I also disagree with the new policy of reporting license plates and receiving notice. As I stated in Monday’s board meeting, I believe we should explore the use of non-police interventions like the creation of a multi-city violence intervention or crime interruption program that would help prevent violence before it happens. Additionally, we need to look at the root causes of violence, many of which have been exacerbated by the pandemic. How can we help people get what they need to thrive? More of our American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) dollars should be distributed to help people stay in their homes, address food insecurity, and create a mental health response team to support people in times of crises. Together we can reimagine our government’s response to violence. We just have to muster the empathy and courage to do it. Arti Walker-Peddakotla is an Oak Park village trustee and organizer of Freedom to Thrive Oak Park.
ARTI
WALKER
PEDDAKOTLA One View
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Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
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Remembering former Village President Larry Christmas p. 33
How to best support a grieving person
say the name of the deceased pery husband Rich died from COVID in December 2020. son. This past year has been a 7. Connect in some way with challenging grief jourthe grieving person on birthdays, ney, as well as a learning anniversaries (importantly, the anexperience for me. A family member niversary of the death), and special recently asked me to share suggesholidays. This past year, I greatly tions for how one can best support appreciated cards, messages, and a grieving person, which prompted me to write flowers that I received for our wedding anniverthis with the hope that they might help all of us sary, Rich’s birthday, and the first anniversary to become better supporters of those who are of his death. hurting. 8. Do something unique and thoughtful. My I don’t presume to speak for every grieving friend Fran hand-painted a glass vase with a person, but I know what has helped me. Here bucolic scene of a reflective pond in Sweden are practical ways in which you can lessen the that I had posted on Facebook. I had described pain of grief and let the grieving person know this scene as a kind of heaven on earth. I was so that they are not alone: touched when it unexpectedly arrived in the mail. 1. Always call or send a sympathy card or letter 9. Offer to help with some very practical tasks, and, if possible, attend a shiva, such as sorting through funeral, or memorial service. clothes, books, and files, But grief is a long journey. donating used medical equipThe grieving person needs to ment and supplies, and so on. know that you are there for That supports the grieving them beyond the first few days person to move forward with or weeks. Hand-written letters the necessary activities of life and cards will mean a lot. The when they don’t have much grieving person will apprecienergy to do so. When you do ate that you took this time and offer, follow through. thought. 10. Mostly, just show that 2. Check in with the grievyou care. Bring your authening person periodically. Invite tic self and be with them in them out for a walk, a movie, their pain, without diminishor to your home for dinner RICH MEANS AND ANNE ROONEY ing it or ignoring it. Rememor even morning coffee on ber that grief is not over in a the back deck. The grieving month, six months, or a year. This is a deep loss person needs someone to be with them in their that the grieving person will live with for the rest pain. Be a witness. of their life. 3. Don’t try to smooth everything over or try to No one “does” grief perfectly. It’s often a deeply convince the grieving person that they really don’t painful, unpredictable, and messy process — both feel as horrible as they do at that moment. Listen for the grieving person as well as for their family to their stories. This time is for and about them, and close friends. Grief is something we will all not you. experience in our lives in response to signifi4. Two of the biggest misconceptions people cant losses. No one is an expert. Each journey is have about grief are that it should be over with unique to the person traveling it. quickly and/or that the grieving person doesn’t Healing from grief is also not a straight line. want to talk about the beloved person. Grieving The grieving person may oscillate between mulpeople do! Don’t rush them — or in any way give tiple emotions in a single day, seeking to regain the impression that they should be “over” their equilibrium in their life. They will move forward grief by now. with grief and eventually integrate this deep 5. Bringing in food is always good, especially in loss into their life experiences. Being a witness the first days and weeks. Friends surrounded me and a caring person in this process can be a with care packages — from homemade chicken profound gift, but it is not always easy. soup to banana bread. But it’s not just nourishWith practice, we can feel more comfortable ment that the grieving person needs or wants. and become more effective. In the words of the Share a meal. Do the inviting so the grieving great Maya Angelou, “Do the best you can until person doesn’t have to. They just don’t have the you know better. When you know better, do energy right now. better.” 6. Talk and share memories about the person Anne Rooney is a resident of Oak Park. Her who has died. Invite the grieving person to do the husband, Rich Means, died in December 2020. same by asking non-invasive questions. Freely
ANNE ROONEY One View
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Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
O U R
V I E W P O I N T S
V I E W S
Choosing a village manager
A
handful of Oak Park residents tuned in Sunday evening via Zoom for a first-of-its-kind event. The village board, now likely closing in on the selection of our next village manager, allowed citizens to see the three finalists in what passed for action. We are nothing but appreciative that this village board pulled back the curtain a smidge and let the puny number of interested residents hear the finalists answer a generic series of questions posed by Katie Rush, the moderator, a staffer at the GovHR search firm and once the village manager of nearby Riverside. There is always the distancing that a virtual meeting engenders, but the canned questions were not designed to spark an interesting conversation. There were the “What will your top three priorities be if you are chosen?” and “What will be your biggest challenge if you are chosen?” variety of chestnuts. Tell us about sustainability, infrastructure and, this being Oak Park, what about this darned diversity and equity issue?! We did not get to the “If you were a tree, what tree would you be” question, which might have actually been more revealing unless they all defaulted to “Oak.” Lisa Shelley, the current interim village manager and a top administrator in Oak Park for better than two decades, had both the inside track — because she knows and has worked on several of the specific goals already set by this board — and the worry that after all those years she is not better known for leadership in the community. Lionel Lyons brings 35 years of experience, though mostly as a department head in various capacities within the very large city government in Phoenix. While he is now serving in a smaller Virginia community, he has not led an organization. He touted his hands-on work related to police reform in Phoenix. Eric Johnson is a village manager in the smaller northwest suburb of Carpentersville. He described himself as a somewhat larger personality and made the case for active engagement across the village and within village hall. He cited the large Latino population of Carpentersville and his efforts in the decade since the village rescinded its hateful “English only” ordinance to create a diverse and inclusive government. In this COVID moment when the job market is so tumultuous, we were disappointed in the small overall number of candidates who applied for what we have long considered a plum position among city managers. There is also the reality that Oak Park is a tough town to work in. Our challenges are real and complex. The resources are not endless. And there is a level of division in the village that is worrisome. Choosing a village manager, its single employee, is make or break for a village board. We wish this board the best in its decision, and we thank them for opening up the selection process to public review.
11 days On a project which has lived on perpetual “extensions,” granted by River Forest’s village board for more than a decade, we are hopeful that the decision Monday to grant the developers of the Lake and Lathrop mixed-use project a final 11-day extension to secure its construction financing will be the last. Construction on the project has actually begun at long last. An unspecified but COVID-related cause was cited for Wintrust Community Bank and the developer not having completed the paperwork. We’ll be watching. And we assume the village will be watching for this final extension to expire and the work to continue.
T
Who will fill the void?
hich Nhat Hanh died last week at the age of 95. The New York Times described him as a Vietnamese monk “with global influence” who “championed what he called ‘engaged Buddhism,’ applying its principles in pressing for peace.” In the 1960s, Nhat Hanh urged Martin Luther King Jr. to oppose the war in Vietnam (King nominated him for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1967) and was instrumental in the process that led to the Paris Peace Accords in 1973. He was a proponent of mindfulness meditation, the practice that, in recent years, has become widespread in the West. My first encounter with mindfulness came through one of his online guided meditations. He had the gentlest voice I’ve ever heard. The experience changed me. I considered Thich Nhat Hanh one of the “Big Four” spiritual figures in the world. Desmond Tutu, the South African archbishop who partnered with Nelson Mandela to bring about the end of apartheid and who headed the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which enabled South Africa to move beyond the bitterness produced by apartheid, died the day after Christmas at the age of 90. Suddenly, the “Big Four” has been reduced by half. That leaves the Dalai Lama and Pope Francis, who are 86 and 85 years old respectively. The deaths of Nhat Hanh and Tutu have left a spiritual void. Who will fill it? I searched online and found Watkins’ annual list of “the 100 Most Spiritually Influential Living People in 2022,” which appeared in the Jan. 13 edition of their magazine. Watkins is a book shop in London that “has been encouraging spiritual discovery and providing seekers with esoteric knowledge for over 120 years.” They began their annual 100 list in 2011 “with the goal of celebrating the world’s living spiritual teachers.” According to their criteria, the list’s choices are based on being frequently googled, appearing in Nielsen data, having a Wikipedia page, and being “actively talked about throughout the internet.” That makes the selections more democratic, they say. The Watkins list has Pope Francis and the Dalai Lama at #1 and 2. Somehow, Gwyneth Paltrow appears on the list (for the first time) at #9, whereas Thich Nhat Hanh is #38. Go figure. Desmond Tutu is #6 with an asterisk (he died after the magazine went to print). Their list features the dynamic teen eco-activist Greta Thunberg (at a lofty #3). I would include her as well, but I would add another young activist, Malala Youfsazi, who promotes education for women worldwide. Watkins and I agree on Franciscan priest/author Richard Rohr, but I would include Parker Palmer, a Quaker writer/ educator and, though I’ve only read one of his books, Jon Pavlovitz, author of If God is Love, Don’t Be a Jerk. I would also add Jack Miles, a former Jesuit (and former Oak Park resident), whose two books, God: A Biography and Christ: A Crisis in the Life of God, changed the way I view the Bible. My list makes room for Dr. Paul Farmer, who founded Partners in Health in Haiti and has since expanded his health care network globally. My only politician is Jimmy Carter, our most spiritually inspiring president (since Abraham Lincoln). The Watkins list includes celebrities such as Oprah Winfrey (#7) and Ariana Huffington (#25). Influential? Definitely. Spiritual? I don’t know. And that goes for the many authors on the list: Eckhart Tolle, Matthew Fox,
Paulo Coelho, Alice Walker, Deepak Chopra, Pema Chodron, Don Miguel Ruiz (author of The Four Agreements), Ken Wilber, Jack Kornfield, Eben Alexander, Tara Brach, Caroline Myss (an Oak Park resident), Richard Bach (who reportedly wrote Jonathan Livingston Seagull while living in Oak Park), Marianne Williamson (who ran for president), Karen Armstrong (historian of religion), Gary Zukav, Elaine Pagels, and beat poet Gary Snyder. All have reputations and a following, but it’s one thing to write wisely about spirituality. It’s another to live it beyond the written word. The only other institutional religious figures I recognized on the list were Rowan Williams and Justin Welby, the 104th and 105th archbishops of Canterbury respectively. I was particularly impressed by Williams when he was interviewed for On Being. I could compile a worthy list just by going through the roster of Krista Tippett’s interviewees over the past 20 years, including Michael Pollan this past Sunday, who has written much about food and the potential of plants, most recently the spiritual and therapeutic benefits of psychedelics used in a safe, structured, guided setting. I would add Tippett herself to my list because her show has had a significant influence on my spiritual development. My list also includes personal mentors, one of whom, Alex Rakowski, died this past year at the age of 90. Others are Charlie Finn and Bill Burke (youngsters in their 80s) and Fr. Jim O’Connor (Trappist monk at New Melleray Abbey in Iowa, who is deaf and living in the eternal now in his late 90s; he, too, grew up in Oak Park). I would add Fr. Mike Pfleger (pastor/activist at St. Sabina’s Parish in Chicago), Greg Boyle (a Jesuit who works with gang members in L.A.), Nuns on the Bus, Sr. Joan Chittister (a firebrand for change), and Vinnie Ferraro (who found mindfulness by way of prison). I’m still mourning Civil Rights icon John Lewis, ecoactivist/author Barry Lopez, Catholic writer extraordinaire Brian Doyle, and poet Mary Oliver, all of whom died recently but left a wonderful legacy. Writers, at least, remain with us through their words after they depart. What distinguishes spiritual giants, on the other hand, is their living presence, which reassures and reinforces. Influential and inspiring? Yes, but also living their spiritual values beyond the cultural spotlight. Their impact is felt worldwide. They provide guidance and wisdom, but also serve as exemplary role models, with unquestioned holiness, or at least wholeness. They have tamed or transcended ego, which is to say achieved humility, while articulating a vision for improving the world that is universally applicable and achievable. Living with evident simplicity, exuding authenticity, demonstrating compassion. Plus the quality that these four have (or had) in abundance: Joy. A high bar indeed … and in deed. Spiritual role models help us believe that genuine goodness is still possible. They serve as a touchstone, an antidote to cynicism — Nhat Hanh’s persistent peacemaking, Tutu’s commitment to reconciliation, Francis’ tender care for the poor and displaced, and the Dalai Lama’s indomitable smile in exile. Yet we are surrounded every day by the goodness of those who never enter the spotlight. We don’t really need spiritual giants to get where we’re going. We just need everyone going in the same direction.
KEN
TRAINOR
V I E W P O I N T S S H R U B T O W N
by Marc Stopeck
Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
W E D N E S D A Y
JOURNAL of Oak Park and River Forest
Editor and Publisher Dan Haley Senior Editor Bob Uphues Equity Editor/Ombudsman Michael Romain Digital Publishing and Technology Manager Briana Higgins Staff Reporters Stacey Sheridan, F. Amanda Tugade Staff Photographer Alex Rogals Viewpoints Editor Ken Trainor Real Estate Editor Lacey Sikora Food Editor Melissa Elsmo Columnists Marc Blesoff, Jack Crowe, Doug Deuchler, Mary Kay O’Grady, Kwame Salter, John Stanger, Stan West Design/Production Manager Andrew Mead Editorial Design Manager Javier Govea Designer Susan McKelvey Business Manager Joyce Minich Marketing Representatives Marc Stopeck, Lourdes Nicholls Development Manager Mary Ellen Nelligan Development & Sales Coordinator Stacy Coleman Circulation Manager Jill Wagner E-MAIL jill@oakpark.com Chairman Emeritus Robert K. Downs BOARD OF DIRECTORS Chair Judy Greffin Treasurer Nile Wendorf Deb Abrahamson, Gary Collins, Darnell Shields, Sheila Solomon, Eric Weinheimer
Larry Christmas: committed to public benefit of the personal cost to himself. I was saddened to learn about the recent In spite of these extraordinary qualities, death of Larry Christmas. I really came to I think it was Larry’s gentleness and kindknow Larry when he served as the Oak Park ness that most defined him. Larry Christvillage president from 1993 to 1997 and I was mas was at all times a gentleman, and an the Oak Park village attorney. Oak Parker to his core. He has now joined There has never been an easy time to be the the growing list of Oak Parkers who are Oak Park village president and the 1993 to 1997 leaving us, and who have played a signifiterm was no exception. I was there through it cant role in making Oak Park the special all and can attest to the fact that compliance community it is today. with the law, fairness, responsibility and Remember Larry, and all those who have public benefit were at the heart of every deLARRY CHRISTMAS gone before him, who have done so much to cision Larry made on behalf of the village. give us the Oak Park we have today. I can also attest to the fact that when he And send them your thanks. encountered controversy, misconduct or wrongdoing, he had the moral and ethical underpinnings and courRay Heise age to confront them and see them through, regardless Retired Oak Park village attorney
Disappointed by 7 Van Buren approval In general, I was disappointed by the village board’s unanimous decision to approve the planned development application of the Oak Park Residence Corporation (OPRC) to build an oversized 45-unit apartment structure at 7 Van Buren. Don’t get me wrong, it’s a great development, just not there. What I also don’t agree with is the hyperbole used to describe the compensating benefits of the building. OPRC Executive Director David Pope claimed that this building will be a model for the entire Midwest for its mixture of design, affordable housing, and net-zero-energy consumption. Two supporters effusively in their public comments carried on about how this development was everything needed by Oak Park to comply with the admirable goals laid out during last year’s
world climate summit in Scotland. What was lacking by the village board was barely a hint of concern for the impact of the density of the new development on neighboring property owners at this specific location. There were, and are, other appropriate locations: think Madison Street now that the sky’s the limit there (even Village President Vicki Scaman thinks the great wall on Madison at the end of her block is now “cool”). For me the comments of one trustee in particular stuck out; her only questions and concern were what artistic flourish would be added to the building for the benefit of Oak Park at 7 Van Buren. My hyperbolic opinion: That’s like what shade of lipstick should be put on a pig.
Chris Donovan Oak Park
About Viewpoints Our mission is to lead educated conversation about the people, government, schools, businesses and culture of Oak Park and River Forest. As we share the consensus of Wednesday Journal’s editorial board on local matters, we hope our voice will help focus your thinking and, when need be, fire you to action. In a healthy conversation about community concerns, your voice is also vital. We welcome your views, on any topic of community interest, as essays and as letters to the editor. Noted here are our stipulations for filing. Please understand our verification process and circumstances that would lead us not to print a letter or essay. We will call to check that what we received with your signature is something you sent. If we can’t make that verification, we will not print what was sent. When, in addition to opinion, a letter or essay includes information presented as fact, we will check the reference. If we cannot confirm a detail, we may not print the letter or essay. If you have questions, email Viewpoints editor Ken Trainor at ktrainor@wjinc.com.
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ADDRESS 141 S Oak Park Ave., Oak ParkIL 60302 ■ PHONE 708-5248300 EMAIL Dan@OakPark.com ■ ONLINE www.OakPark.com Wednesday Journal is published digitally and in print by Growing Community Media NFP. The newspaper is available on newsstands for $1.00. A one-year subscription costs $43 within Cook County and $53 outside of Cook County. Advertising rates may be obtained by calling our office. Periodical rate postage paid at Oak Park, IL (USPS 10138). Postmaster, send address corrections to Wednesday Journal, 141 S. Oak Park Ave., Oak Park, Il 60302. © 2022 Growing Community Media, NFP.
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Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
Guns or roses
No good deed goes unpunished
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hen a good plan or deed is unrewarded, the phrase, “no good deed goes unpunished” is often recited. This is certainly the situation President Biden has faced. His detractors have been able to diminish or dismiss his accomplishments in his first year in office even though our country has benefited from the first two major bills Biden initiated. The first was the COVID relief bill (ARPA), and recent infrastructure bill. These two bills have been and continue to be so popular with the public that many Republicans erroneously claim they supported them. These bills have been a great boost to the economy, which was failing when Biden took office. The unemployment rate has now dropped to its lowest level in almost 20 years. President Biden then decided to focus on voting rights, which is primary to our nation’s freedom. Twenty states have written restrictive voting bills meant to limit balloting by minorities and people of color. A federal voting rights bill would eliminate the states’ racist actions. Our democracy depends on voting rights and they should be affirmed promptly. Voting rights are imperative and must be adopted even before the much-needed Build Back Better (BBB) bill. It should be noted that in 2006, when the Voting Rights Act was last reauthorized, all Republican senators voted for it. Making this voting rights bill a priority in no way diminishes the BBB social needs bill which includes: further stimulation for the economy, fair-salaried jobs, improvements in health care, lowered pharmacy costs, child tax credits, and measures to clean the environment and combat global warming. Stabilizing rising inflation and help for the needy are two other facets of this bill. In this land of plenty, no one should go hungry, and this administration seems determined to accomplish this. The BBB has been thoroughly discussed with bipartisan-minded conservatives, and the “fat” has been eliminated. Therefore, this bill should receive an affirmative vote. It is what government funds are meant to address.
Although we citizens tend to concern ourselves with domestic issues, the president has the responsibility of facing national and international problems, such as getting our troops out of Afghanistan, ending a 20-year, no-win war that cost many, many American lives. However, the way in which this withdrawal took place has been a subject of continued controversy. An additional formidable challenge, among the many our president faces, is the UkrainianRussian border crisis. He’s trying to quell the threats and discord without more military intervention. The overwhelming problem President Biden faces is the pandemic, which has swept across our nation and the world. Guided by medical and scientific recommendations, he has set mandates for vaccines, mask use, and physical distancing in public, multi-service areas. These mandates are meant to be life-saving measures against this rapidly moving and relentless scourge infecting folks with one variant after another. Our nation is weary of this torment. It is surprising to me that many folks, especially the Trumpers are so angry with Biden’s mandate decisions. Far from deeming his actions good deeds, they continue to push for testing the constitutionality of such presidential actions. Biden’s effort to stop the spread of this serious virus and save lives is a perfect example of being punished for good deeds. Biden’s administration has appealed to bipartisan support. Some have cooperated and testified about the treasonous coup that was meant to destroy our government on Jan. 6, 2021. Trump’s intent to rule our nation with his power-madness and lies were plainly displayed in that terrible insurrection. Although his coup was thwarted, it was a vicious blow to our democracy. It has left us with confusion and chaos. President Biden has tried to calm our fears by with many good and promising plans that all of us can appreciate — Independents, Republicans and Democrats. Most Americans want a strong democracy. Let’s work together for our freedoms.
HARRIET HAUSMAN One View
D200’s poor fiscal management
Our District 200 high school board and the finance administrators who advise them are clearly out of step with their taxpayer base. They keep storing up our money in their reserve fund. Reserves recommended by the state should be about $22 million and we have a D200 reserve of about $90 million. This is damn poor fiscal management. And it is telling everyone that it’s the only important taxing body that we taxpayers have to pay for,
which it isn’t. School districts need taxpayer goodwill and approval if they are to be successful in the long run because they often need millage increases. Think about it. Would you give another penny to the high school when it manages money this way?
Charles Wells Oak Park
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We do not need guns and bombs to bring peace; we need love and compassion.
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Mother Theresa
urrently, we are witnessing an “arms race” between and among American citizens. Before I attempt to analyze the reasons behind the increasing rate of armed citizens, let me share some data on gun ownership in the U.S. According to the Small Arms Survey (2017), U.S. Census, “There are more guns than people in the United States.” At the time this survey was done, there were 326 million people in the U.S. and 393 million guns. In an article (2018) from the Washington Post newspaper, a startling reality emerges — there are enough civilian-owned firearms in the United States for every man, woman, and child to own a gun and still have 67 million guns left over. The Post article documents that “the Obama years were a boom time for America’s gun manufacturers, which doubled their annual output between 2009 and 2013, fueled in part by fears of a federal crackdown on gun ownership that never materialized.” Even more disturbing is the following factoid: ■ With an estimated 120.5 guns for every 100 residents, the firearm ownership in the United States is twice that of the next-highest nation, Yemen, with just 52.8 guns per 100 residents. Now the statistics and factoids are about 4 years old, and one can only surmise that, given the COVID-19 pandemic the rate of gun-ownership has increased. Who or what are we afraid of, and why are we so fearful? Are guns the answer? Is the issue guns or no guns? Or is the issue the type of guns being manufactured and sold? Who, outside of the police and/or military, need a high-powered automatic rifle with a 30-bullet clip chamber? If the gun is for sport hunting, your target, when hit by one of these assault guns, will be little more than a clump of fur or a mangled carcass. If your objective is to protect home and hearth, do you need such a powerful killing tool? In the spirit of full disclosure, I come from a family of gun owners, from my grandparents to my father. For the record, guns in my family were kept from children stored and locked away. I vividly remember having to sneak my 96-year-old grandfather’s gun from his house in Detroit to protect him from his own trusted firearm. That’s the point: A gun is not a pet; it does not recognize or refuse to be discharged toward you
because you’re the owner. Owning a gun requires maturity, mental stability, and training on the proper handling and use. Yet if fear is the motivating reason to buy and own a gun, you are increasing the probability of something bad happening to you or someone else. While I am not suggesting eliminating civilian gun ownership, I do believe we can rein in the proliferation of these assault rifles by policies that protect both the gun owner and potential victims. For example, many suggest we regulate all guns like we regulate the sale and use of cars. Specifically, based on a chart I came across, we should do the following regarding all types of gun-ownership: ■ Title and tag at each point of sale like cars ■ Gun training like driver training ■ Written test like driver licensing ■ Practical test for both guns and cars ■ Health requirements for both guns and cars ■ Liability insurance on each gun and car ■ Renewals and inspections at intervals like cars Admittedly, there is no guarantee that these measures will eliminate gun violence. I recognize that criminals and thugs will always gain access to both legal and illegal guns. However, such measures would go a long way in recognizing how lethal unregulated gun ownership can be in our homes and on our streets. Next, to get at what is motivating this surge in gun ownership, we must identify the threats and fears we experience or imagine. As Americans, why are we afraid of each other? Does the struggle for social justice by so-called minorities trigger fears for the majority population? If so, why? Or are we fearful of attack or invasion from a foreign enemy? Whatever our rationale, we must avoid the knee-jerk reaction to arm ourselves “just in case.” Maybe, just maybe, we can move from fear-based responses to love and compassion. What next? As a friend of mine points out, are we looking at people parking military tanks on their lawns? I really believe that the more love and compassion we arm ourselves with, the less need we will have to menace each other with guns. Wake up, America, and smell the roses! Kwame Salter, a former Oak Parker, is president of The Salter Consulting Group LLC.
KWAME SALTER
V I E W P O I N T S
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Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
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‘Electrify’ is key to the climate crisis
e seem to be at an inflection point regarding our stance toward global warming; meaning that a lot is happening at all levels, from the international all the way down to our local households. Many of us are taking an “all hands on deck” stance to this crisis, as evidenced by the formation of Oak Park Climate Action Network (Oak Park CAN), an ad hoc group which has nudged the Oak Park Village Board and staff toward formulating a climate action plan. We’ve also seen other local governmental bodies, most notably the Park District of Oak Park, moving ahead with ambitious projects to both conserve energy and produce it through solar installations. Which brings me to Electrify by Saul Griffith. I don’t normally write book reviews, but this book has made quite a splash in the environmental community, and for good reason. Appropriately subtitled “An Optimist’s Playbook for Our Clean Energy Future,” Griffith simultaneously lays out the case that climate change is an emergency like no other while assuring us that following his game plan could result in an incredibly revitalized economy and a much more pleasant place to live, while averting a worldwide climate crisis. An engineer, inventor, entrepreneur and
MacArthur Fellow, Griffith draws on his extensive experience in measuring our country’s energy use for the U.S. Department of Energy. Electrify was released in October by MIT Press. It is currently available through the main branch of the Oak Park Public Library. I got my copy through a special order at The Book Table. Despite the fact that the book is crammed full of graphs and tables, the writing style is surprisingly crisp and accessible to the lay (non-engineer) reader. Griffith’s basic position is that time has run out and we have to focus on the largest sources of carbon emissions if we are to have a realistic chance of getting the problem under control. He identifies the overwhelming source of carbon dioxide (about 75%) as the combustion of fossil fuels. Other sources, such as livestock, fertilizer, manure and cement pale in comparison. It is refreshing that he cuts through a lot of side issues and provides a broad perspective of our current situation, making the case that we have to set aside 1970s’ notions of regarding energy conservation and recycling in order to focus on the task at hand. Don’t sweat the small stuff, he is saying, because the task at hand is big and needs our attention. The good news is that we possess the technologies needed to convert to an electricity generation system reliant on noncarbon producing means. Solar and wind
NICK BRIDGE One View
generation and batteries have plummeted in price while swiftly gaining market share. On the consumption side of the energy-use equation, we now have vastly improved electric vehicles and heat pump technology, which enables us to convert, with greater energy efficiency, to electric clothes dryers, hot water heaters and home heating. Even better, electrifying everything presents an opportunity to revitalize our economy in a way similar to what happened when our country was forced to ramp up manufacturing during World War II. Without leaning too heavily on the doomsday scenario, Griffith reminds us of the multiple ways that the climate crisis is getting worse, including rising sea levels, extreme weather events, and potential crop failures. Although our technology is pointed in the right direction, he convincingly argues that waiting for the market to fix the problem will take too long. Griffith comes up with a detailed plan of action that includes a great deal of information about how our electrical system works and how it must be changed. Although making our energy system allelectric will require vastly increasing our generation of electricity, it will actually reduce our energy use to less than half of what it is now, he claims. His argument is nothing short of exhaustive, and at times exhausting, as he covers such needs as revamping the grid, financing, zoning changes and other policy decisions that will have to be made by our political
leaders. Financing will be key, as the changes have to reach every income level to cut carbon emissions sufficiently. He likens the need for low-interest financing — for the acquisition of rooftop solar, cars and heating systems — to the low-interest financing provided during the Great Depression to avoid foreclosure on millions of homes. Indeed, he sees this as a potential boon to lower-income households that typically spend a much higher proportion of their incomes on energy consumption. He pushes aside such considerations as the possibility of some dramatic breakthrough in carbon capture or free-market solutions like carbon taxes or carbon trading as being either untried or too slow. Citing our experiences in other crises, he makes a very convincing case that we can avert a severe climate crisis. The effort to ramp up our war machine during wartime does show that we could probably accomplish a similar large-scale revision of our economy. One wonders, however, if we need an enemy to make today’s crisis real in the minds of our countrymen. Or perhaps we just need to make it a race with the Chinese and Russians to see who can get rid of their smokestacks the fastest, echoing our earlier race to the moon. Nick Bridge is former chair of the Oak Park Energy and Environment Commission and is currently a member of the Oak Park Plan Commission.
O B I T U A R I E S
Cliff Augustine, 82 Priest, farmer, teacher
Clifford Louis Augustine Sr., 82, of Oak Park, at times called “Padre,” “Amigo” and “Brother Cliff ” by friends, died on Jan. 15, 2022. Born on Sept. 18, 1939, his chief interests were politics, theology, and philosophy — he earned a degree in all three. He loved Belize, and looked forward to his weekly Amandala newspaper from Belize in the mail. He spent most of his life trying to logically understand God via books while his wife constantly reminded him that God can also be known experientially, in daily experiences. After the priesthood, he was a banana farmer who served as chairman of the Banana Control Board in Cow Pen and also engaged in a political campaign for Stann Creek Rural. In the U.S. he was an instructor for many years with Malcom X City Col-
lege and the Spanish Coalition for Jobs. A strong advocate for social equity and justice, he was loved and respected. His passing ends a Belizean love story with his wife of almost 48 years. His wife, children, other relatives, and friends in Belize, Cayman Islands, and the U.S. will miss his singing while preparing fry jack and johnny cake. His last words to his children were to live for others. Cliff leaves behind his wife, Elma Whittaker-Augustine; his children, Kafara Augustine, Clifford “Ras Pin” Augustine, and Karena Augustine-Plepel (of Oak Park); and two grandchildren, James and Sophia Plepel (son-in-law James Plepel). He was very close to his in-laws, William “Junior” Whittaker, Rosie Whittaker-Myles, Wendell Whittaker, Alvin “Mas” Whittaker and Wayne Whittaker and their family. He is also survived by his uncle, Paul Casimiro; his nieces, and nephews; and several cousins, including Conrad Lewis, Jessie and Russell Nunez and Dr. Ted Aranda. He was predeceased by his parents Luke and Candida Augustine; his siblings, Margaret Augustine-Aranda and Dudley Augustine; and his brother in-law, James Aranda. A Mass of celebration and goodbye will be held in Belize at a future date.
Drums of my Fathers / of my Grandfathers / of my Ancestors / Drumming in my psyche / Souls of my Fathers Drum! Beat! Beat On! Drum On! And On! Ayo, brother Cliff ! The drums of your father will beat on and on. We love you.
Helen Callahan, 80 Teacher and counselor
Helen M. Callahan, 80, a longtime resident of Oak Park, died on Jan. 21, 2022 at the University of Chicago Medical Center. A graduate of Rosary College (now Dominican University) with a bachelor’s degree in English and a minor in Social Studies and Education, she earned a master’s degree in Counseling from Northeastern Illinois University. She was an elementary school teacher at Komarek School in North Riverside for 39 years, teaching over 1,600 children, many of
whom kept in contact with her. She was also an adjunct clinical supervisor and seminar instructor for 12½ years at Dominican and continued as a substitute teacher in the Oak Park School District 97 until she died. She wrote, directed, and filmed a program that aired on public television several times, “Irish Dancing with the Callahans,” which starred her brother Daniel W. Callahan Jr. and his daughter Kimberly. She also served as a docent at the Frank Lloyd Wright Home & Studio in Oak Park. Helen Callahan was the daughter of the late Daniel W. and Helen Callahan; sister of Geri (Mike) Rice; and the aunt and greataunt of many nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her siblings, Mary (late Edwin) Ziebell, Thomas (late Viola), Patsy (late John) Collins, Michael (Ann), Daniel (Betty), Kathleen (Terry) O’Brien and Patrick Callahan. Visitation will take place at the ConboyWestchester Funeral Home, 10501 W. Cermak Road, Westchester, on Thursday, Jan. 27 from 3 until 8 p.m. A funeral Mass will be celebrated at 10 a.m. at St. Giles Catholic Church, 1025 Columbian in Oak Park, followed by interment at Queen of Heaven See OBITUARIES on page 36
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O B I T U A R I E S
Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022 continued from page 35
Cemetery. Memorials may be made to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. In lieu of flowers, at Helen’s request, please take a friend to lunch. Arrangements were handled by Peter B. Kennedy & Co., Funeral Directors.
Dan Malhiot, 42 Weightlifter and coach
Daniel Robert Malhiot, 42, of River Forest, died suddenly on Jan. 15, 2022. Born in Oak Park on March 31, 1979, he lived there for most of his life. A lifelong fan of baseball and especially the Chicago Cubs, he enjoyed playing in the local Oak Park league as a kid and eventually became a coach for several years. In his late teens, he developed a passion for weightlifting. For 25 years, he studied and practiced it, even when fighting physical limitations due to multiple sclerosis in recent years. He felt at home in the gym and easily made friends there. Beneath a strong and tough exterior, he was known to his family and friends as a fun-loving guy with a kind heart, always there to listen and impart advice. Dan is survived by his children, Lindsey (Phil Duncan) and Dylan Malhiot; his parents, Kathryn Sanderlin and Robert Malhiot; his brothers, Jonathan (Julie Malhiot) and Alex Malhiot (Andy Smith); his nephew and niece, Brayden and Mackenzie Malhiot; and many aunts, uncles, and cousins. Lindsey and Dylan were his heart and nothing was more precious to him. A memorial service will be held in the spring or summer. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made in Dan’s name to the National Multiple Sclerosis Society: www.nationalmssociety.org.
Austin McGreal, 74 Musician, real estate attorney, woodworker
There were no half-measures for Austin Joseph McGreal III, 74, of River Forest, who died on Dec. 26, 2021. Born on October 8, 1947, he went all-in on his interests and passions. He demonstrated this gift throughout his life. He entered adulthood in a quintessentially “Sixties” fashion — he became a musician and a pool player living in California. He needed a fake ID when they played in Las Vegas. He traveled the Western states with his drums and the band. He always said music was his passion. Unfortunately, he needed to eat so he decided to grow up. He returned to California and settled into real estate, enduring both the boom and bust of this industry. He managed apartments in California, built apartments in Casper, Wyoming and launched a community with a Jack Nicklaus golf course and a Martina Navratilova tennis club in Yuma, Arizona. Although never a golfer, he worked continuously at his tennis game and made traveling to his ongoing projects easier by becoming an instrument-rated pilot. But it was music that nurtured his soul. In the 1990s, he became a paralegal and eventually landed at BP. He enjoyed the work but could not settle for the paralegal half-measure; he returned to school and earned his JD at the youthful age of 58. As a newly minted attorney with a background in real estate, he was transferred to Chicago to close real estate deals. That’s where he met his wife, Marsha. After he retired from BP, he changed course and developed into a dedicated Social Security Disability attorney. He became a passionate advocate for the people he represented. He finished his last case in November 2021.
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His latest endeavor revolved around woodworking. He would spend days in the garage where he designed a workshop, handcrafting desks, tables, and an entire kitchen of cabinets for the people he loved. Austin is survived by his wife, Marsha Thomas; his sisters, Kim Pearson and Monique Milner; his sons, Michael Murphy and Mathew Holton, and stepchildren, Katharine Hildreth, Thomas Hildreth, Anne Hildreth and Robert E. Hildreth. He is also survived by grandchildren, greatgrandchildren and many nieces and nephews. His parents, Austin J. McGreal Jr. and Marilyn McGreal (nee Morrison) predeceased him. A Celebration of Life for Austin will be held in the spring. Further information will be posted.
Bob Negoski, 78 Firefighter
Robert J. “Fireman Bob” Negoski, 78, of Oak Park, formerly of Chicago, has died. A Vietnam army veteran, he retired as a Chicago Firefighter with 50 years of service on Truck 30 & Engine 28. A member of Chicago Firefighters Union Local 2, he was chairman of the CFFU Burn Foundation and received the John A. Moncrief Award for individual continuing service in the burn community. Member of the Union Local 2 Retirement Committee and the Chicago Gaelic Fire Brigade, he helped many since the days of the “Brotherhood of the Barrel.” Bob Negoski was the husband of the late Betty Negoski (nee Hawks); the father of Jeanette Negoski; stepfather of Peggy (Vince DiCola) Hugelier, Michael (Jackie) Hugelier, Tracy (Alex) Garcia and John (Tina) Hohmann; step-grandfather of Krystal (Kyle) Piotrowski, Gina Hugelier, Anthony Hugelier, Gabi (Chris Diaz) Hohmann, Alyssa (Gunner) Carlson, Rachele Garcia, Jessie Garcia, Michael Hugelier Jr., and Cody Garcia; step-great-grandfather of Lyle Carlson, Brantley Carlson, Aubrey and Gianna Piotrowski; brother of Judith (Ben) Shafer, Rich (Debra) Negoski, and Diane (the late John) Murphy; uncle to many nieces and nephews; and friend to all. Visitation was held on Jan. 23 and Jan. 24 at Hitzeman Funeral Home, 9445 W. 31st Street in Brookfield. Funeral Mass was celebrated at St. Louise de Marillac Church, LaGrange Park, followed by interment at Resurrection Cemetery in Justice, Illinois. In lieu of flowers, memorials are appreciated to: American Cancer Society, 1 E. Wacker Drive, Suite 1500, Chicago, IL 60601.
Joseph Norton, 86
Attorney, St. Edmund parishioner Joseph Norton, 86, a longtime resident of Oak Park, died on Jan. 15, 2022. Born in Chicago on April 14, 1935, he grew up in Rockford and lived in Oak Park from 1960 to 2021. He was an active member of the St. Edmund Catholic Parish for almost 50 years. Mr. Norton graduated from the University of Notre Dame, with honors, in 1957. He served two years in the U.S. Army Counter-Intelligence Corps and then earned a Juris Doctor degree from De Paul University. He was a partner and trial lawyer in the firm of Querry and Harrow, Chicago, for more than 30 years and was a member of the Chicago and Illinois State Bar associations. He is survived by Nancy (nee Tice), his wife of 63 years; his three daughters, Mary Johanna (Joe) Ciuni, Katie (Bob) Trankina, and Jane (Jeff) Stier; his 10 grandchildren, Joe, Jane, Tom, and Michael Ciuni, Lucy, Bridget, and Daniel Trankina, and Jack, Nora, and Matthew Stier; and two great-granddaughters, Grace and Mae. He also leaves his sister, Mary Lou King (Bob), and brothers, Tom (Kathy) and John (Ellen). Visitation will take place on Friday, Jan. 28 from 4 to 8 p.m. at Peterson-Bassi Funeral Chapel, 6938 North Ave., in Chicago. A funeral Mass will be celebrated at 11 a.m. on Saturday, Jan. 29, at St. Edmund Church, 188 S. Oak Park Ave., in Oak Park. Masks required. N95 masks will be provided. In lieu of flowers, donations to Franciscan Outreach Association Home - Franciscan Outreach (franoutreach.org), St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital (www.stjude.org), and Fisher House Foundation - Make a Donation are appreciated.
Memorial service for Don Offermann A celebration service for the life of Donald Offermann will be held at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Feb. 12, at Grace Lutheran Church, 7300 Division St. in River Forest. Family greeting will be held in Fellowship Hall immediately following the service. Please note, due to the current COVID-19 pandemic restrictions, face masks will be required, and food and drink will not be available in Fellowship Hall.
Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
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PART-TIME ELECTRICIAN’S HELPER
Call contracter for more info. 708-738-3848
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. QUALIFICATIONS 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
JANITORIAL
Part-time. 3-5 days per week. Evening hours 5-9. $13-15/hr to start. Job located in Morton Grove, IL. Must have own transportation. Call Larry for more information. 773636-2505
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. WORKING CONDITIONS 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.
MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST
Part time or Fulltime Medical Receptionist for an OB Gyne Office in River Forest Nye Partners in Women’s Health Please email resume to: yvonne@ nyepartners.com
The Village of Oak Park is seeking qualified candidates for the position of Assistant Director of HR and Racial Equity in the Human Resources Department. This newly created position supports the management of activities and operations of the Human Resources Department and collaboratively develops and drives an organization-wide racial equity and social justice strategy, ensuring timely execution of objectives, and continuously monitoring the progress towards reaching milestones. The incumbent will lead and provide subject matter expertise to the leadership team in the development and implementation of equity initiatives, both internal and external. Applicants are encouraged to visit the Village of Oak Park’s website http:// www.oak-park.us/jobs. Position opened until filled.
POLICE RECORDS CLERK
The Village of Oak Park is seeking qualified candidates for the position of Police Records Clerk in the Police Department. This position will perform a wide variety of specialized clerical duties in support of the Police Department including processing and maintaining documents, correspondence and coding reports; and to provide information and assistance to the public. Applicants are encouraged to visit the Village of Oak Park’s website at http:// www.oak-park.us/jobs.
SANITARIAN
The Village of Oak Park is seeking qualified candidates for the position of Sanitarian in the Health Department. This position will perform a variety of duties including education and enforcement activities for the promotion and protection of the public health environment. Applicants are encouraged to visit the Village of Oak Park’s website http:// www.oak- park.us/jobs.
SEASONAL FARMERS’ MARKET MANAGER
The Village of Oak Park is seeking qualified candidates for the position of Seasonal Farmers’ Market Manager in the Health Department. This position manages the Oak Park Farmer’s Market including the vendors that sell directly to the public within established guidelines. This is a part-time seasonal position with work from January-mid November and work required on Saturday’s from May through October. 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. Open until filled.
PART-TIME COMMUNITY SERVICE COORDINATOR
The Village of Oak Park is seeking qualified candidates for the position of Part-Time Community Service Coordinator (up to 10-15 hrs./week) in the Adjudication Department. Thisperson monitors individuals who have been ordered to provide community service in the Village, coordinates with organizations that provide community service opportunities, etc. Applicants are encouraged to visit the Village of Oak Park’s website http://www.oak-park. us/jobs. Open until filled.
National Accounts Rep Get a job super close to home!
Top rated firm, Alpina Manufacturing LLC, founded in 1992, locally Manufacturing owned beautiful campus in Galewood, near Mars candy, 3 blocks north of Oak Park. We build and sell display framing systems to customers nationwide including Wal-Mart, Verizon, Circle K, Hospitals. We are seeking a college educated trainee to become an office professional. Work is in person at our beautiful, safe, spread out, elegant executive offices in Galewood. We train, no travel, work in Galewood. Open to any backgrounds. Excellent pay, salary, benefits, friendly caring management, Oak Park owner. Please send resume to careers@fastchangeframes.com. Visit www.fastchangeframes.com/careers for more details. 6460 W. Cortland Street, Chicago, IL 60707
River Forest Public Schools District 90 River Forest Public Schools District 90 is seeking to hire a School Psychologist for a full-time position for grades PreK-4th starting in December 2021. To qualify, candidates must have a valid Illinois Professional Education License with endorsement in School Psychology (PreK-4). A Master’s Degree is preferred as well as 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 problem-solving with school and District teams. The right candidate will facilitate MTSS meetings, including individual and grade-level planning meetings. Integrate D90 practices around equity and inclusivity into daily work and relationships with students, families and colleagues.
Duties include: Completing appropriate psychoeducational assessments for children who have or are suspected of having a disability. Identifying and assessing the learning, development, and adjustment characteristics and needs of individuals and groups, as well as, the environmental factors that affect learning and adjustment. Using assessment data about the student and his/her environment(s) in developing appropriate interventions and programs. Responding to parent and teacher requests for evaluations in accordance with Illinois law and maintaining compliance in accordance with Illinois special education law. Application Procedure: Interested candidates should complete the online application availableat district90.org.
River Forest Public Schools District 90 River Forest Public Schools is seeking a part-time, 0.60 FTE Physical Education Teacher for Lincoln Elementaray School, Pre-K-4th Grade.
Qualifications: a) Valid Illinois Professional Educator License with Grade-Appropriate Physical Education Endorsement b) Successful teaching experience in physical education preferred c) A Master’s Degree is preferred
Job Duties: Work in partnership with the full-time PE teacher to instruct students in Pre-K through 4th grade on how to develop habits of mind and actions that support good health, fitness and enjoyment of sport
SAWA’S OLD WARSAW RESTAURANT
Help wanted. Hiring all positions. Apply in person at 9200 W Cermak Rd, Broadview, IL 60155.
ACCOUNTANT CLERK
The Village of Oak Park is seeking qualified candidates for the position of Account Clerk II. This position which 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.oak-park.us/.
and play. The PE teacher will facilitate a learning environment that engages students in learning skills for sport and fitness, as well as SEL skills by growing confidence, sportsmanship and team spirit. The PE teacher will cultivate an environment that supports risk taking and trying new things. The PE teacher will demonstrate strong classroom management as children enjoy PE inside the gym or outdoors on the field. Collaboration with all D90 colleagues, including the special education team, classroom teachers, other special area teachers and administration is integral to their daily work, as well as their contributions to building-wide events and activities. Interested candidates, please complete an online application at https://www.district90.org/about/employment
PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE
The Village of Oak Park is seeking qualified candidates for the position of Public Health Nurse in the Health Department. This position will provide professional public health nursing services including health education and promotion which includes disseminating information, making referrals, and counseling as well as managing caseloads, and performing a variety of tasks relative to assigned area of responsibility. Applicants are encouraged to visit the Village of Oak Park’s website http://www.oakpark.us/jobs. Interested and qualified applicants must complete a Village of Oak Park application. This position is open until filled with first review of apps 2/2/22.
ASSISTANT VILLAGE ENGINEER
The Village of Oak Park is seeking qualified candidates for the position of Assistant Village Engineer in the Public Works Department. This position will be responsible for participating in the development and implementation of goals, objectives, policies and priorities for assigned programs including design, mapping, field survey, private development, real estate and program planning for future public works and capital needs and also recommend, within Village policy, appropriate service and staffing levels while administering departmental policies and procedures. The ideal applicant will have extensive knowledge of the principles and practices of civil engineering, applicable laws and regulatory codes relevant to assigned area of responsibility, prepare understand and interpret engineering construction plans, specifications and other contract documents. Applicants are encouraged to visit the Village of Oak Park’s website http://www. oak-park.us/jobs. Interested and qualified applicants must complete a Village of Oak Park application. Open until filled.
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Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
CLASSIFIED
BY PHONE: (708) 613-3333 BY FAX: (708) 467-9066 BY E-MAIL: EMAIL@GROWINGCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG RENTALS & REAL ESTATE
MARKETPLACE CARS WANTED
CLASSICS WANTED CLASSICS Restored or Restored or Unrestored Unrestored
Cars Motorcycles Cars & & Vintage Vintage Motorcycles Domestic / Import Import Cars: Cars: Mercedes, Corvette, Mercedes,Porsche, Porsche, Corvette, Ferrari’s, MuscleCars, Cars, Ferrari’s,Jaguars, Jaguars, Muscle Mustang && Mopars Mopars Mustang
WANTED TO BUY WANTED MILITARY ITEMS: Helmets, medals, patches, uniforms, weapons, flags, photos, paperwork, Also toy soldiers – lead, plastic – other misc. toys. Call Uncle Gary 708-522-3400
ITEMS FOR SALE 40 in. gas range double oven, side by side: $350 obo Wardrobe cabinet: $195 obo Desk: $195 obo CALL 773-722-0405
Collector James Collector James 630-201-8122 630-201-8122
CLASSICS WANTED
Restored or Unrestored Cars & Vintage Motorcycles HOME SERVICES Domestic / Import Cars: HAULING ELECTRICAL Mercedes, Porsche,ELECTRICAL Corvette, Ferrari’s, Jaguars, Muscle Cars, A&A ELECTRIC Mopars Let anMustang American & Veteran do your work
$$ Top $$ all makes, Etc.
We install plugs for battery-operated vehicles We fix any electrical problem and do small jobs We install Surge Protectors • Home Re-wiring • New Plugs & Switches Added • New circuit breaker boxes • Code violations corrected Service upgrades,100-200 amp • Garage & A/C lines installed Fast Emergency Service | Residential • Commercial • Industrial Free Home Evaluations | Lic. • Bonded • Ins. • Low Rates • Free Est.
Collector James
630-201-8122
708-409-0988 • 708-738-3848 Sr. Discounts • 30 Yrs. Exp. Servicing Oak Park • All surrounding suburbs • Chicago area
FLOORS KLIS FLOORING INC.
New hardwood flooring installation & pergo. Sanding, re-finishing, staining. Low prices, insured. Call: 773-671-4996 www.klisflooring.com
HANDYMAN Mike’s Home Repair Drywall H Painting H Tile Plumbing H Electric H Floors Windows H Doors H Siding Ask Us What We Don’t Do
STUDIOS, 1, 2 & 3 BR Best Selection & Service
BASEMENT CLEANING
Appliances & Furniture Removal Pickup & Delivery. 708-848-9404
PAINTING & DECORATING CLASSIC PAINTING Fast & Neat Painting/Taping/ Plaster Repair Low Cost 708.749.0011
708-296-2060
HANDYMAN Roofing Repairs Concrete Repairs • Drywall All types of handiwork Call For Free Estimates
OAK PARK & FOREST PARK
708-386-7355
MMpropMgmt.com BERWYN 1 BEDROOM
1 BR,gorgeous Apt w/ granite kitchen countr top. All appls. HT/WTR inc. Security cams. $1000 + $1200 sec. Close to Shpng Mall 708-699-8916
OFFICE /RETAIL FOR RENT RIVER FOREST–7777 Lake St. * 1116 sq. ft. * 1400 sq. ft. Dental Office RIVER FOREST–7756 Madison St. * 960 sq. ft. OAK PARK–6142-44 Roosevelt Rd. * 3 & 5 room office suites FOREST PARK–7736 Madison St. *2500 sq. ft. unit Strand & & Browne Strand Browne 708-488-0011 708-488-0011
Top $$ Etc. $$$$Top $$allallmakes, makes, Etc.
Ceiling Fans Installed
SUBURBAN RENTALS
FOREST PARK 1 BEDROOM
GREAT LOCATION- CLEAN AND QUIET on 2nd floor: lg eat-in kitchen, lg livingroom, parking, coin laundry on premises, includes heat, cooking gas and water. close to I290/Blue Line, shops, Loyola Med and RushOak Park Hospital. no smoking-no pets $1100/mo. Call: 708-262-2444 or 708-598-8898. *view by appt only.
ROOMS FOR RENT
Large Sunny Room with fridge, microwave. Near Green line, bus, Oak Park, 24 hour desk, parking lot. $125.00. New Mgmt. 312-212-1212
PLASTERING McNulty Plastering & Stucco Co.
Small & big work. Free estimates. Complete Plaster, Stucco & Re-Coating Services
708/386-2951 • ANYTIME Work Guaranteed
Licensed, Bonded, Insured, & EPA Certified Expert craftsmanship for over 50 years
WOODWORK Terry's
Woodwork Restoration On-site refinishing of wood
and fiberglass since 1977. Includes doors, woodwork, windows, staircases and new woodwork etc. All work done by hand. NO sanders. Your unfinished project my specialty! References available. Contact Terry Seamans at 630-379-7148 or terryseamans@yahoo.com
S W NE
! H S A FL
773-637-0692 Ask for John
Reach the people making the decisions. Place an ad in GCM Classified! Call 773/626-6332
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Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
CLASSIFIED
BY PHONE: (708) 613-3333 BY FAX: (708) 467-9066 BY E-MAIL: EMAIL@GROWINGCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG
PUBLIC NOTICES
PUBLIC NOTICES
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: Y21008415 on December 28, 2021. Under the Assumed Business Name of PHEE PHUMPS DESIGN CO with the business located at: 2623 ELDER LN, FRANKLIN PARK, IL 60131. The true and real full name(s) and residence address of the owner(s)/partner(s) is: MELISSA GUILLEN 2623 ELDER LN, FRANKLIN PARK, IL 60131.
PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICE OF COURT DATE FOR REQUEST FOR NAME CHANGE
Published in Wednesday Journal January 12, 19, 26 2022
PUBLIC NOTICE OF COURT DATE FOR REQUEST FOR NAME CHANGE STATE OF ILLINOIS, CIRCUIT COURT COOK COUNTY. Request of Brian Humberto Sanchez 20212004288. There will be a court date on my Request to change my name from: Brian Humberto Sanchez to the new name of: Brian Roncal Magnani The court date will be held: On 02/22/2022 at 10am at 5600 Old Orchard Road, Skokie IL 60077 Cook County in Courtroom #202 Published in Wednesday Journal January 12, 19, 26, 2022
STATE OF ILLINOIS, CIRCUIT COURT COOK COUNTY. Request of Mercedes De La Paz Buck Case Number 20224000323. There will be a court date on my Request to change my name from: Mercedes De La Paz Buck to the new name of Cedes Delapaz Buck. The court date will be held: On Tuesday March 22, 2022 at 11am via Zoom: Meeting ID 936 6870 5913 Password: 826976 at 1500 Maybrook Dr., Maywood, Cook County, IL in Courtroom #0111. Published in Wednesday Journal January 26, February 2, 9, 2022
PUBLIC NOTICES
PUBLIC NOTICES
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
Starting a New Business?
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY LEGAL NOTICE The Village of Oak Park will receive sealed bids from qualified contractors 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 Wednesday, February 9, 2022 for the following: Village of Oak Park Water Distribution System Leak Survey -Phase I and Phase II Bid Number: 22-112 Bid documents may be obtained 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 January 24, 2022
LEGAL NOTICE The Village of Oak Park will receive bids from qualified general contractors to renovate the bunk room, locker room and restroom at the south fire station located at 900 S. East Ave. in Oak Park, IL. Bids will be accepted at the Public Works Service Center, 201 South Boulevard, Oak Park, Illinois 60302, until 10:00 a.m. local time on Friday, February 18th, 2022. Village of Oak Park South Fire Station Bunk Room, Locker Room and Restroom Renovations Bid Number: 22-101BM Issuance Date: 1/26/2022 There will be a pre-bid meeting at the south fire station, located at 900 S. East Ave., Oak Park, IL 60302 on Thursday, February 3rd, 2022 at 9:00 a.m. Bid forms may be obtained from the Public Works Customer Service Center by calling 708-358-5710 or by e-mailing vics@oak-park. us between the hours of 7:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. M-F. The Village of Oak Park reserves the right to issue proposal documents and specifications only to those contractors deemed qualified. No proposal documents will be issued after 4:00 p.m. on the working day preceding the date of proposal opening. THE VILLAGE OF OAK PARK Published in Wednesday Journal January 24, 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. The Illinois Human Rights Act prohibits discrimination in the sale, rental or advertising of real estate based on factors in addition to those protected under federal law. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal-opportunity basis.
Publish Your Assumed Name Legal Notice in • Austin Weekly News • Wednesday Journal
To complain of discrimination, call HUD toll free at: 1-800-669-9777. Wednesday Journal • Landmark • Forest Park Review
• Forest Park Review • Riverside/Brookfield Landmark Call the Experts Before You Place Your Legal Ad!
Call Stacy for details: 773/626-6332
Let the sun shine in...
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Wednesday Journal, January 26, 2022
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