Meet The Wabash County Fair Princess Contestants #2 Reese Price 

My name is Reese Price, and I am fifteen years old. I am a six-year member of the Allendale Twisters 4-H club. The Wabash County Fair has been a highlight of my summers over the years.I have learned a great deal, made lasting friendships, and grown as a person in numerous ways through my experiences at the fair. I am very grateful for my parents, Jared and Jodi Price, who have supported me each year and with every project. I realize it is a gift to have the experiences that 4-H and the Junior Fair offer, and I sincerely appreciate that my parents made it possible. 

I will be entering my sophomore year as a homeschool student this fall. I highly value the flexibility of studying from home. It has helped me to enjoy learning and has taught me to make wise choices with the investment of my time and energy. 

 This will be my ninth year playing volleyball and my fifth year playing for the Ambassador Christian Academy. I also enjoy playing club volleyball and have been with Evansville United Volleyball Academy for the past two years. This sport is a massive part of my life. The athletic and mental challenge of the game is invigorating, and the team aspect is like no other. I aspire to play in college one day. 

I love my church family at Allendale First Christian Church and feel very blessed to have been spiritually nourished there for the past five years. I officially committed my life to Christ this past January and proudly proclaim Jesus as my Lord and Savior. 

My 4-H projects this year include rabbits, hogs, and horses. I genuinely enjoy working with all three species, but horses are my true passion. My life has always been centered around these magnificent creatures, and their impact on my character has been significant. 

I decided to run for Wabash County Princess this year because it is an excellent opportunity to challenge my comfort zone, practice interviewing skills, and serve others. Our county fair is full of wonderful, hardworking people and families, and I would be honored to spend my time serving them. 

Thank you to my sponsor, Richard Gochenour Construction, for always supporting me and encouraging me in everything that I do.

Meet The Wabash County Fair Princess Contestants: #1 Stella Swanson

 My name is Stella Swanson. I am 14 years old. My parents are John and Tracy Swanson.  My father works for FS in Grayville and my mother owns Keys Hill Engineering.

My hobbies are baking, catching frogs, fishing, walking, drawing, writing, and playing sports. 

My goals for this year are to win a soccer tournament, win a Discovery Degree in my FFA chapter, and grow my baking business.

I would like to be the Fair Princess because I believe the experience would strengthen my leadership skills and allow me to meet many knowledgeable people.

If I am chosen, I will strive to be as helpful as I can be and to be a good role model for the younger kids, and I will represent Wabash County 4-H  well.

Thank you, Food for Thought, for your sponsorship.

Meet The Wabash County Fair Queen Contestants: #3  Zoie Ankenbrand 

Hello! My name is Zoie Ankenbrand. I am the daughter of James and Jennifer Ankenbrand and have one brother, Zeb. Growing up in 4-H, I always looked up to the Wabash County Fair Queens. This year, I’m excited and honored to have the opportunity to compete for the chance to represent our county and be a role model for the next generation.

Some of my favorite things include attending local fairs during the summer, baking, cooking, and photography. I am a proud member of the Blue Ribbon 4-H Club in Edwards County and currently serve as a Senior Federation Member. I’ve been involved in 4-H since I was 8 years old, and this will be my final year. Through these organizations, I’ve had many opportunities to serve my community and live by the 4-H motto, “Make the best better.” If chosen as the 2025 Miss Wabash County Fair Queen, I plan to use my background in community service to help make a positive difference in our community.

The fair is more than just an event to me — it’s a chance to grow as a person and inspire others. I want to encourage the younger generation to keep going, no matter what challenges they face. I understand how powerful, encouragement can be. When I was a first-year showman, I looked up to others for help and guidance, and now I strive to be that support system for others.

Right now, I am the new owner of Café 82:3 and also run my cake business, Gray Cakes, which I started in 2023. Looking ahead at the future, I plan to continue running Café 82:3 and grow my photography on the side, while some day i hope to get married and start a family so my kids get the same opportunity of being in 4-H has I had. 

I’m truly grateful for the opportunity to represent Wabash County and excited about what lies ahead. I see this pageant as a door to new opportunities and connections. When I was younger, I dreamed of one day becoming the Fair Queen. Now, I hope to be the same inspiration to others that past queens were to me.

A big thank you to RT Farms for sponsoring me. Your support means the world!

Meet The Wabash County Fair Queen Contestants #2 Ava Giese 

My name is Ava Giese, and I am seventeen years old. I am proud to say that this year marks my ninth year as a member of 4-H. Throughout my journey, I've been fortunate to have the unwavering support of my parents, Jared Giese and Danielle Peach. They have always encouraged me to pursue my passions, including my deep involvement in 4-H.

I am an upcoming senior at Mount Carmel High School, where I've had the opportunity to grow both academically and personally. During my high school years, I was a three-year varsity tennis player, a member of the MCHS band as part of the color guard, and actively participated in many of the school's musical productions. One of my proudest academic accomplishments was being inducted into the National Honor Society last year, recognizing my commitment to scholarship, leadership, service, and character.

Looking ahead, I plan to attend Wabash Valley College for two years before transferring to a four-year university. My goal is to become an Occupational Therapist, a career path that allows me to help others

This year, l've decided to run for Wabash County Fair Queen because I believe in the power of strong relationships and leading by example. The Wabash County Fair has always been more than just an event—it's a time when our community comes together to celebrate shared values and hard work. I hope to be a positive influence and someone that younger 4-H members can look up to, just as l've looked up to others over the years.

Lastly, I would like to express my sincere thanks to my sponsor, John Haase Family Farms, for supporting me and continually showing dedication to all 4-H members. This support makes opportunities like this possible, and I am truly grateful.

Meet The Wabash County Fair Queen Contestants: Glenna McVaigh

Fair Queen Contestant #1 Glenna McVaigh

Hey y’all, I’m Glenna McVaigh daughter of Tracee McVaigh and the late Jim McVaigh. I'm 19 years old and a graduate of Mount Carmel High School. I’m getting ready to start my sophomore year at Wabash Valley College. There I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business and Production. I am currently interning for Wabash Valley Service Co. in Browns, IL. In high school, I was a member of the National Honor Society, and FFA. I am currently a member of the First Apostolic Church in Mount Carmel, National Technical Honor Society, PAS, Wabash County Farm Bureau, FFA alumni, and 4-H. I have been in 4-H since my cloverbud years and before that I assisted my sister during shows at the fair as well. 

     Through the years, I have shown every animal you see out at the county fair. My heart will always go to my horses and showing pigs! In the future, I plan on owning my own farm where I raise quarter horses, along with other farm animals, and work on expanding myself within the agricultural world. Outside of the family farm and work, you’ll find me at church or the gym. I wouldn’t have gotten where I am if it wasn’t for God being alongside me every step of the way! 

     The reason I am running for Wabash County Fair Queen is to show other girls younger than me that it’s good to step out of your comfort zone and try new things. At the end of the day,  you are the only one who can apply yourself and put yourself out there. I want to show the younger generations that being yourself is better than fitting into the crowd. I also want to shout out to my sponsor Wabash Valley Service Co. for helping me in my running for Wabash County Fair Queen! They have not only been an amazing sponsor, but amazing people to work with who support me and encourage me everyday.

Princeton Couple Sentenced to Combined 14 Years in Federal Prison for $2 Million Mail Theft Scheme and Firearms Offenses

EVANSVILLE- Michael Jerome Wright, 45, and Cortney Lashea Young, 36, of Princeton, Indiana, have been sentenced to 12 and 2 years in federal prison, respectively, for their roles in a mail theft scheme.

Wright pleaded guilty to mail theft, unlawful possession of a mail key, access device fraud, aggravated identity theft, possession of ammunition by a felon, and possession of a machinegun. Young pleaded guilty to mail theft and possession of a firearm by a felon. Both will serve three years of supervised release following their prison sentence.

According to court documents, in 2023, law enforcement officials began receiving numerous complaints about mail theft and check forgery.

In March and April of 2024, Evansville Police Department officers surveilled local United States Postal Service (USPS) collection boxes. On six different occasions, investigators saw Wright open collection boxes with an arrow key around 4:30 in the morning, sort through the mail, then drive off with stolen mail. On at least two of those occasions, investigators saw Young behind the wheel of the getaway car.

The USPS uses a unique type of lock known as an “arrow lock” to secure collection boxes, lockers, and apartment mailbox panels. These locks can only be opened with an arrow key. It is a crime for anyone not authorized by the Postal Service to knowingly have or use arrow keys.

On April 3, 2023, law enforcement officers stopped the pair just as they drove away from another mail theft. Officers searched the vehicle and uncovered an arrow key and stolen mail on the passenger floorboard.

Investigators conducted a court-authorized search of Wright and Young’s apartment in Princeton and located hundreds of checks and their corresponding envelopes, many of which had been previously reported as stolen.  The stolen checks had a total face value of $1,857,460.91.

Investigators also found two handguns under the mattress in Wright and Young’s bedroom. On Wright’s side of the bed was a partially 3D printed, privately made firearm with no serial number. This type of weapon is commonly referred to as a “ghost gun” because it has no records related to its manufacture or sale. Investigators also recovered two, 30-round extended magazines. The ghost gun had a machinegun conversion device, also called a “Glock switch,” installed, allowing it to fire as a fully automatic weapon. Glock switches are themselves considered machine guns under federal law, whether they are installed in a firearm or not. On Young’s side of the bed was a Ruger pistol.

Wright has sustained multiple felony convictions including murder, dealing in a synthetic drug, operating a vehicle as a habitual traffic violator, and operating a vehicle while intoxicated. Young has sustained a felony conviction for fraud. These prior felony convictions prohibit Wright and Young from ever legally possessing a firearm or ammunition.

Also in the bedroom of the apartment, law enforcement found two backpacks. In Wright’s backpack, investigators found 30 debit and credit cards bearing the names of other individuals, as well as a piece of notebook paper that had the names, dates of birth, and Social Security numbers for three other individuals written on it.

“Americans rely on the U.S. Postal Service to securely deliver everything from birthday cards to critical financial documents,” said John E. Childress, Acting U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Indiana. “This couple exploited that trust through a widespread mail theft and identity fraud scheme that caused two million dollars in losses, while arming themselves with very dangerous illegal weapons. We will continue to work with our law enforcement partners to hold accountable those who target the public and abuse systems we all depend on.”

“This case highlights the distinguished partnership between the Indianapolis Field Office, the Evansville Police Department, the United States Postal Inspection Service, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The United States Secret Service has a duty to safeguard the nation’s financial infrastructure, but we protect far more than just the economic interest of the communities we serve,” said Special Agent in Charge of the Indianapolis Field Office, Ike Barnes. “This case is a prime example of how those who look to victimize our communities will do so in numerous ways. Michael Wright and Cortney Young not only exploited our community of roughly $1.8 million in illicit funds but also brought dangerous weapons into our neighborhoods to carry out their depraved scheme.”   

“Protecting the U.S. mail and its customers is at the core of our mission as postal inspectors,” said Acting Inspector in Charge Sean McStravick of USPIS - Detroit Division.  “Thanks to incredible collaborative efforts with our law enforcement partners and the U.S. Attorney’s Office, we were able to do just that by putting these individuals behind bars. This sentencing should be considered a warning to anyone else looking to prey on the Postal Service or its customers – we will bring you to justice.”

The U.S. Secret Service, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, Federal Bureau of Investigation, U.S. Postal Inspection Service, and Evansville Police Department investigated this case. The sentences were imposed by U.S. District Judge Matthew P. Brookman.  

Acting U.S. Attorney Childress thanked Assistant U.S. Attorneys Matthew B. Miller and Todd S. Shellenbarger, who prosecuted this case.

Search On For Wanted Fugitive

MT. CARMEL, IL – The Wabash County Sheriff's Office is actively seeking the public’s help in locating Donald “Scott” Baird, a 54-year-old white male, approximately 6’0” tall, weighing 210 pounds, with brown hair and blue eyes. Baird is known to have lived at 327 N. Cherry Street, Mt. Carmel, Illinois.

Baird was re-sentenced on May 12, 2025, to five years in the Illinois Department of Corrections and was ordered to report to the Wabash County Jail by noon on May 14, 2025. He failed to turn himself in and is now wanted by law enforcement.

On May 15, 2025, a no-bond arrest warrant was issued for Baird out of Wabash County. Baird is considered a fugitive from justice and has a history of fleeing from law enforcement.

A $500 cash reward is being offered by Wabash County Crimestoppers for information that leads directly to Baird’s arrest.

Anyone with information on the whereabouts of Donald “Scott” Baird is urged to contact Wabash County Crimestoppers at 618-262-HALT (4258). Tips can also be submitted anonymously through the Wabash County SheriffApp, available for free download on both Apple and Android devices.

Do not attempt to apprehend Baird. If you see him, contact law enforcement immediately.

Former bank president and contractor plead guilty to federal charge in loan fraud scheme

EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill. – A former bank president and contractor appeared in federal court and admitted to committing bank fraud by conspiring together to falsify loan applications and obtain funds.

Francis Eversman, 74, of Collinsville, and Gregg Crawford, 65, of Columbia, each pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bank fraud for their roles in a scheme that extended from 2011 to 2020.

“The integrity of our banking system relies on the integrity of loan officers and applicants,” said U.S. Attorney Steven D. Weinhoeft. “We will continue to work closely with our law enforcement partners to ensure that those who violate their fiduciary duties and those who obtain loans through fraud are brought to justice.”

According to court documents, Eversman was a senior loan officer at former Tempo Bank in Trenton. Crawford was the owner of construction companies in southern Illinois. Eversman and Crawford admitted in district court that Crawford recruited straw purchasers to act as nominal loan applicants on what were often highly overvalued properties.

“Every American citizen deserves to walk into their bank and trust the people behind the counter. In southern Illinois, these people are usually our neighbors and friends, people that we trust with our money and wellbeing. The defendants in this case violated that trust through schemes aimed to self-serve and increase wealth,” said FBI Springfield Assistant Special Agent in Charge Karen Marinos. “FBI Springfield and our partners with the Office of Inspector General - Treasury and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency will always look out for the wellbeing of the citizens of Illinois and ensure their money is being put in the hands of people they can truly trust.”

His brother-in-law, Eversman, steered these loans through the approval process. Crawford then used the loan proceeds for other purposes. In some cases, Crawford provided fake lease agreements to purport to show rental income from subject properties. When at audit by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency discovered the suspect loans, Crawford instructed a straw purchaser to provide investigators with false information. 

Both Crawford and Eversman waived their right to be indicted by a grand jury and pled guilty to an Information.

Conspiracy to commit bank fraud carries penalties of up to 30 years in prison, five years of supervised release and fines up to $1 million. Sentencing is scheduled for Oct. 14, 2025.

The investigation was conducted by the FBI Springfield Field Office, the Office of Inspector General – Treasury Department, and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. Assistant U.S. Attorney Kevin Burke is prosecuting the case.

July 1st Brings New State & Local Taxes

The First of July yesterday ushered in a new 1% sales tax in the city of Mt. Carmel. The 1% sales tax was approved by the City Council in April with a July 1st start date. It replaces a 1% grocery sales tax that had gone to Illinois cities before it was repealed by the Governor. Municipalities were given the option of reinstating the grocery tax or implementing a 1% sales tax on other items. Mayor Joe Judge commented on the tax on a recent Ask The Mayor segment on WSJD…

Judge said there are some exceptions to the new tax…

July 1st also saw an increase in the Illinois gas tax and higher tobacco taxes in Indiana.

Credit: @BobFiorettiChi on X

‘Hidden gem’: Growing number of visitors discovering southern Illinois as travel destination

Inside the state’s push to boost tourism across its inspirational southernmost region

By SONYA DYMOVA & MAGGIE DOUGHERTY
Medill Illinois News Bureau
news@capitolnewsillinois.com

WOLF LAKE. Ill. — Standing on the edge of a 300-foot limestone bluff in southern Illinois’ Shawnee National Forest, Machaela Sweeney could thank the perfect words she typed into ChatGPT for bringing her to the unexpected spot. 

“I literally looked up lush, magical, fairytale areas,” she recalled, looking over the edge of the forest’s Inspiration Point Trail. 

A 30-year-old social worker from Hopkinsville, Kentucky, Sweeney was looking for a destination to recover from burnout. The AI app recommended two destinations: North Carolina or southern Illinois.

The first recommendation didn’t surprise her. Sweeney said that many people in Kentucky go to the Great Smoky Mountains when they want to get away. But she had never heard anyone talk about the Shawnee National Forest in southern Illinois before.

“So this almost feels like a hidden gem,” Sweeney said. “If somebody was going to the Smokies all the time and they were tired of it, I would say, ‘Try mixing it up.’”

The forest stretches across the eastern and western parts of southern Illinois, from Inspiration Point Trail overlooking the Mississippi River Valley here in the west to the popular Garden of the Gods wilderness area in Herod to the east.

Sweeney is among the growing number of visitors discovering southern Illinois as a travel destination amid a recent effort to entice more people to visit for the summer season. 

Carol Hoffman, executive director of the Southernmost Illinois Tourism Bureau, said the primary draws to southern Illinois are the outdoor recreation activities in Shawnee National Forest, including hiking, cycling, rock climbing and ziplining, as well as another Illinois surprise linked to the unusual terrain: vineyards and five wine trails. 

The bureau has appealed to riders of the Chicago Transit Authority with a recent signage campaign that invited potential travelers to “go where the bus won’t take you” and to “come see our skyscrapers.”

300-foot limestone bluff at Inspiration Point. (Medill Illinois News Bureau photo by Sonya Dymova)

In addition to plastering photos of lush greenery and rocky bluffs across Chicago buses and train stops, the bureau has paid to have promotional mailers, exhibits, shows and content creator posts that promote tourism to Illinois’ southern region.  

Southern tourism bureaus have been tapping into a trend of high visitor spending in Illinois in recent years, exceeding pre-pandemic numbers for the first time in 2023, according to the most recent available data from a 2024 report prepared for the Illinois Office of Tourism

More than $80 billion in economic impact

In 2023, tourists spent over $47 billion across Illinois, creating nearly 450,000 new jobs and generating over $6.5 billion in state and local taxes, according to the 2024 Tourism Office report. The report estimated that tourism in that year generated over $80 billion in total economic impact for the state.

Travel tourism influencer Jessica Baine, 35, has worked on tourism promotions with the Southernmost Illinois Tourism Bureau and Jackson County’s Southern Illinois Tourism bureau for more than two years. 

Baine, a Carterville nurse practitioner raised in southern Illinois, said she regularly receives messages from viewers online who were surprised by the content she shared, telling her, “I had no idea that southern Illinois looked like that.” 


Hoffman’s group aims to connect with people within “an easy day’s drive,” typically those within a three- to six-hour driving distance from the forest, such as those living in central and southern Illinois and in the St. Louis metro area.

The advertising campaign is just one in a series of projects seeking to boost tourism in the area in recent years. The industry has seen a more than twofold increase in funding since 2023, with the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, or DCEO, giving out over $9 million in grants to boost tourism in the southern part of the state. 

That money was distributed to cities and tourism bureaus across the southern half of the state for the last fiscal year, from Alton and Mattoon down to Metropolis, the officially designated home of Superman, where fans can take photos with a 15-foot statue of the comic book hero. 

Past Illinois tourism campaigns have paid major returns. In the 2023 fiscal year, every dollar invested in promoting tourism generated $75 in direct visitor spending, according to the 2023 – 2024 Economic Impact of Tourism report by the DCEO Office of Tourism.

DCEO Tourism Grants Graphic

Grant funds are matched by local hotels and motels hoping to bring travelers in, according to Hoffman. 

In some cases, lodging is the attraction itself. According to Lyle and Tammy Woodrum, the married innkeepers of the Davie School Inn in Anna, Illinois, a fifth of their guests come just for the experience of staying in a former schoolhouse.

Originally built in 1853 as a school, the Davie School Inn was repurposed as a bed and breakfast, but still looks in many ways like a school, with various rooms featuring desks, globes and chalkboards covered with messages from past guests.

Susan Hill traveled from her home in Memphis to stay at the Davie School Inn last month. She said she’s done it a handful of times since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, when she was looking for somewhere to stay where she could sit outside. 


Open cabinet doors in a Davie School Inn guest room display globes and other teacher-themed decorations. (Medill Illinois News Bureau photo by Sonya Dymova)

According to Hill, the novelty of staying in an old school was a draw. “It’s like, heck yeah, come on,” she said. “It's just really quaint. I feel safe there.”

The Woodrums said most of their guests have come for the area’s local attractions, primarily the Shawnee Hills Wine trail and outdoor activities in the Shawnee National Forest but also for family and college reunions. 

‘Wine just likes us’

Shawnee Hills Wine Trail is the largest of the state’s five trails, comprising 12 wineries and 13 locations. It originated in the summer of 1995, when owners of the first three wineries in southern Illinois — Alto Vineyards, Pomona Winery and Owl Creek Vineyard — worked with the Southernmost Illinois Tourism Bureau and the Carbondale Convention and Tourism Bureau to start the first wine trail in Illinois.

Maggie Pugh, assistant manager at Feather Hills Vineyard on Highway 51, said the campaign to attract tourists to the region has had a real effect on the winery. Recently, the company ran out of three of its bestselling — and most bottled — wines, which, to her, is an indicator of increased visitor flow. 

“I think we are getting busier. I think the advertising has worked,” she said. “I also know that the Wine Trail is doing quite a lot to try and bring more people down, because part of the problem is, this area isn't taken seriously for wine — although it should be.”

Illinois is the second-flattest state on the nation’s mainland, seemingly perfect only for corn. But Pugh described the Shawnee Hills region — home to many of Illinois’ highest elevations — as a “little golden nugget” in which “wine (is) just likes us, grapes enjoy our soil.”

Road sign points to wine trail locations along the Shawnee Hills Wine Trail. (Medill Illinois News Bureau photo by Sonya Dymova)

Since 2015, wineries on the trail have won over 30 medals in national and international wine competitions. Although the vineyards are geographically close together, scattered across an area of 40 miles, the trail boasts a wide range of wines, Pugh said. 

“The coolest part about southern Illinois is that even a winery that’s only 20 minutes away from this location right here, our wine is going to taste vastly different, even if we made it the exact same way,” she said. “Our grapes don’t taste the same because of the elevation, and you get those slight hints that might make or break a wine for you.”

‘Illinois’ most hippie town’

Award-winning wines and breathtaking vistas aren’t the only unexpected finds in southern Illinois. 

Makanda, a short drive from the Southern Illinois University campus in Carbondale, features a boardwalk of shops by local artists. Artists sell jewelry, gemstones, sage for burning, paintings, intricate metalwork and more. The tiny village of fewer than 550 people, a short drive from SIU, proudly calls itself “Illinois’s most hippie” town.

Nina Kovar is one of those artists. In her Visions Art Gallery, dream catchers are hung along the front window, inviting shoppers to come browse clothing, jewelry and handmade ceramics. 

Kovar said she sees graduates coming back for homecoming again and again, as well as others who are discovering the town for the first time after hearing about its hippie reputation.

“There’s a certain timeless element to it,” Kovar said of Makanda. “The creativity that we have, that a lot of us are artists and artisans and crafters, that it's kind of nestled in nature; it’s beautiful.”

Kovar said she has seen a significant increase in tourism to Makanda since the COVID-19 pandemic, with people not flying as much, but also wanting to get out of the house and into the outdoors.

Makanda also made it onto the map, Kovar said, because of the total solar eclipse that took place on April 8, 2024. A few shops down from Kovar, artist Dave Dardis painted a line through his shop to represent the path of totality at the time.

Dardis is better known as the Rainmaker, a name he shares with his bronze art studio. A backdoor in Dardis’ shop opens out to his secret garden, a poorly kept secret in Makanda. 

Sculptures peak through the leaves in the secret garden behind the Rainmaker studio in Makanda. (Medill Illinois News Bureau photo by Maggie Dougherty)

The garden features lush greenery and natural elements interwoven with bronze sculptures. Sweeney, a self-described whimsical person, said her visit to Dardis’ not-so-secret garden was the best part of her southern Illinois experience.

“That’s like walking into a literal fairy tale,” Sweeney said. “He’s like a hermit slash hippie slash, I don’t know, man with wisdom,” Sweeney added of Dardis. “He almost reminds me of a sage, like, you know those giant trees that talk?”

Having grown up in the area, tourism influencer Baine is well aware of the traditional engines for local economies — whether that’s coal mining or agriculture. But she sees a path for tourism to become an even bigger factor in time.

“There’s coal mines and there’s all these very blue-collar jobs, but tourism brings even more money to our region. Tourists are spending money at restaurants, at the wineries, and they can reinvest in our communities,” Baine said.

“When you live and breathe southern Illinois, and your kid goes to school here,” she said, “you want these businesses to thrive.”



Sonya Dymova and Maggie Dougherty are students in journalism with Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications, and fellows in its Medill Illinois News Bureau working in partnership with Capitol News Illinois.

Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.