Allendale School Board Notes

At the May 2024 Allendale School Board meeting held in the Library of Allendale School, the board:

Approved the 2023-2024 tentative amended budget which will be on display in the main office for the next 30 days.

Set the date of June 19, 2024 at 6:10 pm for the budget hearing on the amended 2023-2024 budget.

Approved the dates and time for the 2024-2025 School Board Meetings.

Approved to abate $15,000 from Capital Projects Fund to the Debt Service Fund.

Approved the hiring of Jonathan Bowser as Part-time Summer Custodian.

Approved the hiring of Rhett Andrews as Part-time Summer Custodian.

Approved the hiring of Brendan Bowser as Part-time Summer Custodian.

Approved the reduction in hours for Jason Seaton beginning June 1, 2024.

Approved the resignation of Mackenzie Thread as Junior High Math teacher, effective at the end of the 2023-2024 school year.

Approved the hiring of Morgan Thread as District Treasurer, effective June 1, 2024.

Approved the re-employment of the following support staff for the 2024-2025 school year:

Paraprofessionals - Mychelle Blythe, Brooklyn Ritchey, Makayla Wall, Michele Jackson

Individual Aide - Danielle Nelson

Bus Driver - Tom Jefferson, Doug Hawf

Cook - Talley Wyatt

Assistant Cook - Shelly Deisher

Assistant Custodians - Kent Deisher, Ron Witsman

Health Aide - Kristi Isaac

Administrative Assistant - Sarah Courter

Capitol Briefs: House OKs program for student teacher stipends – but not the funding for it

By PETER HANCOCK
& ANDREW CAMPBELL
Capitol News Illinois
news@capitolnewsillinois.com

SPRINGFIELD – The Illinois House approved a bill Tuesday to allow student teachers to receive stipends while earning their education degree, even though the money needed to fund those stipends is unlikely to be included in next year’s budget.

House Bill 4652, by Rep. Barbara Hernandez, D-Aurora, authorizes the Illinois Board of Higher Education to disburse stipends of $10,000 per semester to student teachers working in public schools. That’s the rough equivalent of $15 an hour, based on a standard 40-hour work week. It also authorizes stipends of $2,000 per semester to the teachers who supervise them.

But the authority to disburse those funds would be subject to appropriations. And with an estimated annual cost of $68 million to fully fund the program, Hernandez conceded it is unlikely such funding will be included in the budget for the upcoming fiscal year that lawmakers are currently negotiating.

“I do not think so, unfortunately,” she said during debate on the House floor.

The proposal is an initiative of the Illinois Education Association, the state’s largest teachers union, and the advocacy group Advance Illinois. They argued in committee hearings that the lack of compensation for student teachers deters many prospective teachers from completing their degrees, adding to the state’s ongoing teacher shortage.

Read more: Capitol Briefs: Chicago school board, student teacher pay, local food measures all advance in Springfield

The bill passed the House with bipartisan support, 85-23. But it also drew criticism from some who said the General Assembly spends too much time authorizing programs it can’t afford to fund.

“Here we go again, folks. We’re passing bills that are subject to appropriations,” said Rep. Fred Crespo, D-Hoffman Estates. “I get the sense that we think it’s like Monopoly money. But you’re creating a line item and you’re putting pressure on the budget. It’s an empty promise that gives people a false sense of hope.”

The bill next goes to the Senate for consideration.

Fallen firefighters remembered

Firefighters, families and officials from around Illinois gathered in Springfield Tuesday to remember the firefighters who died in the line of duty in the last year.

Five individuals were memorialized during the annual Illinois Fallen Firefighter Memorial. They include Jermaine Pelt, Andrew “Drew” Price, Lt. Jan Tchoryk and Lt. Kevin Ward, all of the Chicago Fire Department, and Maroa Countryside Fire Protection District Chief Larry Peasley. Their names are now engraved in the Illinois Firefighter Memorial outside the Capitol. 

“Each year at this sacred memorial service we offer tribute to those heroes,” Gov. JB Pritzker said at the ceremony. “To remind us of the sacrifice they made and to beckon forth within ourselves a reminder of our greatest aspirations to serve our families, our communities, our nation with honor.”

Families of the fallen firefighters were bestowed with gold badges at a ceremony following the memorial. Medals of honor and valor were also given to firefighters from across the state.

While the event usually takes place on the Capitol lawn, this year it was indoors due to weather. 

State Rep. Barbara Hernandez, D-Aurora, is pictured in a file photo on the Illinois House floor. She’s the sponsor of a bill to create a stipend program for student teachers, although she said she doesn’t expect funding to be allocated for it in next year’s budget. (Capitol News Illinois file photo)

As vacated Centralia funeral home prepares for new tenant, owner makes a startling find

By BETH HUNDSDORFER
Capitol News Illinois
bhundsdorfer@capitolnewsillinois.com

In the basement of a Centralia funeral home in a dark hallway off the embalming room, tucked inside a nook behind two steel plates and a door, a visitor found three disembodied, neatly wrapped human legs, two of them marked with names and dated to the 1960s. 

The discovery stunned property owner Cindy Hansen, who had been cleaning up at the site of the former Moran Queen-Boggs funeral home for weeks. After all, she’d seen her last tenant evicted, his funeral director license suspended for the home’s filthy conditions – which included a dead rat in a stairwell. 

But as the shock dissipated on what first appeared to be a grisly find, a more mundane explanation materialized – the legs were likely the result of amputations, stored away decades ago until their owners died and they could be reunited and interred together, said Jay Boulanger, who has operated a funeral home in Highland for decades. 

“In those days, hospitals didn’t treat that as medical waste and cremation wasn’t popular then, so they just embalmed them and held on to them. Sometimes, people don’t get them, so they just stay,” Boulanger said.

The discovery was made at the former funeral home operated by Hugh Moran in recent years, but he surrendered his license in March after state regulators found his facility in deplorable condition. But the hidden nature of the room and the fact that two of the legs were dated decades before Moran operated the facility indicate he was not involved in placing them there.

Moran vacated the building last month, and Hansen began scrubbing and filling two large dumpsters with trash. After weeks of work, Hansen was seeing progress. 

Two casket salesmen came to pick up a display last week and asked her for a tour of the historic home with ornate oak woodwork and stained-glass windows, built by a cigar magnate in the late 1800s at the corner of South Elm and East Second streets in Centralia. 

On the tour, one salesman kept returning to that steel door in the dark hallway just off the embalming room.

“Finally, he got a pair of pliers and turned the bolt to open it,” Hansen said. “There was another plate, so he opened that, too. Then, he got to the door and looked in. He backed up and said, ‘There’s legs in there.’”

The three stood for a moment, then closed the door, returned the plates, and pondered what to do next.

“I was completely freaked out,” Hansen said.

But her shock at the situation did not raise any immediate response. She called the Illinois State Police, who called the Marion County coroner, who advised her to lock up when she left on May 7 and they would get back to her. The legs remained at the funeral home as of Tuesday, but the coroner said he will be getting them soon, Hansen said.

In late February, three days after Capitol News Illinois sent questions to the department about an unanswered December 2023 complaint that the embalming room looked “like something from a scary, filthy, freak show,” the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation inspected the building.

Inspectors didn’t disturb the steel plates blocking the nook with the legs, but they did find that Moran had maintained the embalming room in “extremely unsanitary conditions,” and he agreed to surrender his funeral director license permanently. Photographs of the room submitted with the complaint depicted a water leak, piles of dirty laundry and medical waste, along with the dead rodent. 

The conditions at Moran’s funeral home became public within months of a discovery that a Carlinville funeral home provided the wrong ashes to at least 80 families, spawning lawsuits and legislation.

Sen. Doris Turner, D-Springfield, introduced legislation called “Reestablishing Integrity in Death Care Act” after that discovery resulted in at least nine exhumations, including five from Camp Butler National Cemetery in Springfield.  No criminal charges have been filed against the funeral director responsible for those remains, August Heinz.

Senate Bill 2643 codifies best practices already in place by most funeral homes, mandating that a unique identifier must be put on the deceased’s body and any other associated human remains. Under the proposal, a director must also document the chain of custody for all bodies and human remains. 

The bill also mandates that the state must respond to complaints within 10 days and gives authority to remedy the complaints, including inspecting the funeral home premises. 

That bill is awaiting a vote in the House. 

Clean-up at the former Moran-Boggs continues.

But the name on the sign outside will soon change. Funeral Director Vonda Rosado will take over and change the name to Maxon-Rosado Funeral Home, the same as her other funeral home in DuQuoin. She plans to hire a professional to clean the embalming room.

“We want to restore the history and integrity of this beautiful facility,” she said. 

 

A doorway is pictured in what was once the embalming room of the Moran Queen-Boggs Funeral Home in Centralia. Behind it, a visitor last week found a hidden nook behind two levels of steel plates, which covered three human legs that were neatly wrapped and dated to the 1960s. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Beth Hundsdorfer)

City Reminder: You Must Be Licensed Driver To Operate Golf Carts On City Streets

Summer vacation is about to start for local kids and City Commissioner Susan Zimmerman issued a reminder at Monday’s City Council meeting that no one under the age of 16 is allowed to drive golf carts and UTV’s on city streets. She said a golf cart operated by an underage driver pulled out OF North Park in front of her recently and nearly hit her vehicle…

Mayor Joe Judge pointed out that not only do golf cart/ UTV operators but they also have to be licensed drivers. In response to a question from Commissioner Tom Meeks, Police Chief Mike McWilliams said seat belts are not required for anyone, including children, riding on the back of golf carts. While most golf carts aren’t equipped with rear seat belts, officials said they only cost about $100 to install.

13 Graduate From Allendale School

On Tuesday, May 14th, Allendale Elementary School promoted 13 eighth grade students to high school.  Here is a list of the students promoted:

Cadence Buchanan

Logan Doerr

Keilob Escobedo

Emma Ford

Noah Hipsher

Conner McGinnis

Clairabelle Nelson

Stetson Potts

Gabby Schneider

Joel Schneider

TJ Singh

Aiden Swift

Tiffany Westlake

Receiving awards last night during the promotional exercise were the following:

American Legion Award presented by Mr. Clint Seybold - Noah Hipsher and Cadence Buchanan

Reading Award presented by Mrs. Elizabeth Perry - Keilob Escobedo, Emma Ford, Conner McGinnis

Top Accelerated Reading Award presented by Mrs. Elizabeth Perry - Emma Ford

Spelling Award presented by Mrs. Elizabeth Perry - Conner McGinnis

English Award presented by Mrs. Elizabeth Perry - Conner McGinnis

Math Award presented by Mrs. Mackenzie Thread - Emma Ford and Joel Schneider

Science Award presented by Mr. Nick Waldroup - Conner McGinnis

Social Studies Award presented by Mr. Nick Waldroup - Conner McGinnis

Heath Award presented by Mr. Ryan Dougherty - Joel Schneider

Accelerated Reading Honor Wall (100+ points) presented by Mr. Bob Bowser - Cadence Buchanan, Logan Doerr, Keilob Escobedo, Emma Ford, Noah Hipsher, Conner McGinnis, Stetson Potts, Gabby Schneider, Joel Schneider, TJ Singh, Aiden Swift, and Tiffany Westlake

All-Sports Award presented by Mr. Bob Bowser - TJ Singh

Allendale CCSD 17 wishes each of these students the best of luck in their high school endeavors.

ISP ARREST FLORA MAN FOR PREDATORY CRIMINAL SEXUAL ASSAULT OF A CHILD  

FLORA - Illinois State Police (ISP) Division of Criminal Investigation Zone 8 announces the arrest of 26-year-old Braxton D. Allen of Flora, IL, for Predatory Criminal Sexual Assault of a Child (Class X Felony).

 On April 11, 2024, ISP was requested by the Flora Police Department to conduct an investigation into an alleged Predatory Criminal Sexual Assault of a Child which occurred between May 1, 2021, and May 31, 2021, in Clay County.  After a thorough investigation, agents presented the findings to the Clay County State’s Attorney.  On May 13, 2024, Braxton D. Allen was formally charged with two counts of Predatory Criminal Sexual Assault of a Child and was taken into custody on an arrest warrant by Flora Police Department.  Allen was transported to the Clay County Jail where he remains in custody with no bond.

 ISP was assisted by the Flora Police Department, Wayne County Sheriff’s Department, and Illinois Department of Children and Family Services.  No further information is available at this time.

Lest We Forget... Our Duty to Remember

For over ninety years, the men and women of the Indiana State Police have committed to the values of duty, honor, and sacrifice in their service to the citizens of Indiana.  It is in that value of sacrifice that we as law enforcement professionals place the safety of others ahead our own.  All too often that steadfast commitment results in a loss of life, our own.  To date there have been forty-nine Indiana State Police personnel that have lost their lives in the line of duty. 

As an agency, the Indiana State Police embraces a solemn duty to remember, honor, and celebrate the lives of our personnel that have made the ultimate sacrifice.  We perform that duty in a number of ways, whether it be the Annual Memorial Service(s) held at each District during the month of May;  the Memorial headstones and Memorial boards that are displayed at each District facility; our In Memoriam web page; the ‘Lest We Forget’ memorials sent out annually on each heroes date of death; roadside memorials shrines; and Memorial flags placed at the headstone where each of our fallen now forever rests in peace.  Along with the tangible practices of remembering, it is also expected that all ISP personnel perform their duties in a manner that reflects favorably and in honor of those that have gone before us.

Presently the Indiana State Police has an entourage of troopers that have traveled to Washington D.C. for National Police Week. with the families of fallen Master Trooper James Bailey (Fort Wayne Post) and Trooper Aaron Smith (Indianapolis Post).  National Police Week is held each year in the nation’s capital during the month of May (May 12th-18th, 2024) and offers honor, remembrance, and peer support, while allowing law enforcement, survivors, and citizens to gather and pay homage to those who gave their lives in the line of duty.  

 The names of Master Trooper James Bailey and Trooper Aaron Smith, along with the seven other officers from Indiana that were killed in the line of duty during 2023, have been forever etched in the National Law Enforcement Memorial Wall .

 We will always remember, forever honor, and respect those that serve in their memory!

IDOT 5-Year Plan Includes Route 1 From 9th Street To Lawrence Co. Line

BENTON, IL – State Representative Dave Severin says his 116th district will be the recipient of more than $680 million in highway and bridge construction and repair projects over the next 5 years. Severin recently met with Illinois Department of Transportation Secretary Omar Osman in Springfield to review IDOT’s Multi-Year Plan (MYP).

“Projects ranging from adding additional lanes to I-64 and I-57 to local highway and bridge repair will be happening throughout my district to the tune of more than $680 million over the next five years,” Severin said. “These are critical investments in our infrastructure that help keep our citizens safe on the roadway and help attract and retain companies to Illinois.”

Severin says Southern Illinois needs safe highways and bridges just like everyone throughout the State of Illinois.

“I’m fighting to ensure that the hard-working taxpaying citizens of my district get their fair share,” Severin said. “We need the good-paying jobs and improved safety and mobility for our citizens that will come as a result of these critical infrastructure projects.”

The funding for 123 construction projects happening from 2024-2029 comes from Illinois’ “Rebuild Illinois” Highway Improvement Program. A full listing of the projects is available on Severin’s website at RepSeverin.com/highway-improvements-planned-for-the-116th.

Some of the construction projects include:

-           $75 million for additional lanes on I-57 south of Bonnie from IL 154 to Atchison Creek

-           $20 million for bridge replacement at Gun Creek north of IL 154

-           $18 million for bridge replacement on I-64 .2 miles east of IL 37

-           $48 million for additional lanes on I-57 from Bonnie to I-64 South

-           $45 million for interchange reconstruction and bridge replacement at the I – 57/1-64 interchange at the IL 15 interchange in Mt. Vernon

-           $15 million for bridge replacement south of the I-57/I-64 N tri-level interchange

-           $10.8 million for bridge replacement over the abandoned railroad .5 miles west of US 45 and over US 45 north of Mill Shoals in Wayne County

-           $51 million for bridge repair on I-64 in Washington County west of County Highway 11 to the Jefferson County line

-           $160 million for bridge replacement over the Wabash River on I-64

-           $8.6 million for overlay and ADA improvements from the Lawrence County line on IL 1 to 9th street in Mt. Carmel

-           $16.5 million for overlay and new shoulders on IL 37 from the Franklin County line to IL 14 in Benton

-           $17 million for bridge replacement and addition of a bikeway from Larry Foster Parkway to Fitzgerrell Park Drive at Rend Lake on IL 154

-           $12 million for overlay and new shoulders on IL 37 from Campground Road in Bonnie to the Franklin County line