Skokie in 2016: A look at some of the newsmakers

Niles High School teacher Pankaj Sharma, second from right, shared his Golden Apple Award honor with students in April 2016. (Mike Isaacs / Pioneer Press)
Niles High School teacher Pankaj Sharma, second from right, shared his Golden Apple Award honor with students in April 2016. (Mike Isaacs / Pioneer Press)

Skokie welcomes new restaurants, retailers

Economic development in Skokie in 2016 came down to the pithy cliche of “out with the old and in with the new.”

The former home of the iconic Jack’s restaurant at Touhy and Laramie avenues, already closed when the year began, became part of the property for a new shopping plaza called “Jack’s Corner.”

The Skokie village board Feb. 1 signed off on final plans for the plaza, which included a new drive-thru Starbucks — which opened in late December.

When Bob’s Discount Furniture opened earlier in the year just south of Westfield Old Orchard mall, it completed the rehabilitation of a retail strip that had been vacant not long ago.

The furniture store, along with four other stores that opened in Chicago at the same time, marked the first Midwest entries for the East Coast-based furniture retailer.

“We’ve identified Illinois as a major market for us outside of where we’ve traditionally operated,” said regional manager Todd Peter, who oversaw all of the Illinois stores.

Skokie’s first Culver’s restaurant with a drive-thru lane, located in the 9400 block of Skokie Boulevard, was approved by the Skokie village board early in the year. The restaurant will sit near a small shopping plaza facing Skokie Boulevard

Many hours before the Skokie Jollibeee’s restaurant opened in late July, a line of at least 400 people snaked beyond and around the building and toward the full parking lot.

“We expected a line, but to be honest, not to begin this early,” Jose Minana Jr., group president of Jollibee Foods Corp. for North America, said at that time about the line. “For these guys at the front to get here at 9:30 last night, we’re really humbled by that.”

The new Filipino-based chain, which made its Midwest debut in Skokie, is located in the Touhy Marketplace shopping center in the 3500 block of Touhy Avenue. Jollibee first began as an ice cream parlor in the Philippines, company officials said, and has grown to more than 750 restaurants and stores.

In downtown Skokie, the Euro Echo Cafe, 7919 Lincoln Ave., located across from the revamped Skokie Theatre, opened Memorial Day weekend. The restaurant serves breakfast, lunch and dinner, and allows for eating outside on an adjoining patio with tables and umbrellas when the weather accommodates.

One of the village’s most popular and highest regarded restaurants announced it would be leaving downtown for larger digs in Evanston.

Kabul House owner Akmal Qazi said the family tried to stay in Skokie, but repeated efforts to find a larger space did not work out, forcing the move to 2424 Dempster St. just over the Skokie border.

Qazi announced Kabul House’s downtown Skokie location would close at the end of summer and the new Evanston restaurant would open up in days if even that. But the closing and reopening are still pending.

Several criminal incidents see no suspect charged, or even identified

The body of Catherine Benyamin, 31, was found the morning of March 24 inside her Skokie apartment in the 8200 block of Keating Avenue. Her death was ruled a homicide.

Police then began a search for her 10-month-old son, Joshua Powell, and the boy’s father, Jermaine Powell. The boy was dropped off later on March 24 at a church near Halsted Street and Roosevelt Road in Chicago, police said

Jermaine Powell, 38, was arrested March 27 in the 2700 block of West Jackson Boulevard, according to police. He was charged with misdemeanor criminal trespassing to property and also had a warrant issued against him for a parole violation.

Powell was wanted for questioning in the slaying of his child’s mother, but charges were still not filed against him in that case as 2016 drew to a close, according to authorities. Powell is in Cook County Jail, however, held without bond on a robbery charge.

In other 2016 Skokie police news, a man was found dead Oct. 8 in the driver’s seat of a burning car.

The man was identified as Thomas Damnitz, 50, of the 9100 block of Lawler Avenue. He lived on the same block where the vehicle was discovered, according to the address provided.

Two bank robberies occurred in Skokie in 2016.

Police said FBI agents and task force officers responded July 6 to reports of a bank robbery at First American Bank, 4611 Golf Road. Police called the incident “a non-takeover robbery” in which no weapon was displayed by the suspect.

The suspect has still not been caught, according to authorities.

That’s different than the armed bank robbery Dec. 13 at First Bank and Trust, 8047 Skokie Blvd. police responded to.

The suspect, identified as Gary Gaines, of the 200 block of North Ridge Avenue in Evanston, took $9,999 from a teller at the bank after displaying a silver handgun, according to a criminal complaint filed in court by the FBI. Police said they credited a GPS tracker the teller put with the stolen money for aiding in catching Gaines within minutes of the hold up. Gaines was caught by Skokie police in a residential area not far from the bank, after a brief foot chase, authorities said.

Skokie school districts approve building expansions

Two Skokie school districts in 2016 moved forward with major school building additions even if they were green-lighted in different ways.

A significant addition to Skokie School District 73.5’s Elizabeth Meyer School (along with a smaller one at Middleton School) never went before voters. A small group of residents tried to get the district’s addition plans on the ballot but they failed to get enough signatures to force a referendum.

The additions are estimated to cost $10.3 million. Of the the total cost, $9 million of it is for Meyer, and the expansion will nearly double the size of the school, officials say.

Under the district’s plans, the 23,000-square-foot addition will extend the school to the north and then sharply turn west with a new library at the elbow of an “L-shape.”

The Meyer project calls for a one-story addition featuring seven classrooms including a room for art and music as well as a new gym, a library, a gross motor room for special education students and three small instructional offices. The Middleton project calls for one multi-purpose room to be added.

It took approval from East Prairie School District 73 voters in Skokie during the Nov. 8 election to allow the district to build a new school. Voters approved a referendum that authorized a $47 million bond issue.

The referendum passed decisively.

The vote followed a lengthy process that included multiple town hall meetings with residents of the one-school district.

The school board in August voted to put the bond issue on the November ballot.

Dist. 73 officials said the original 92,000-square-feet building was built in eight different sections and would have required about $17 million in maintenance work to address health and safety issues.

The school district is working with STR Partners LLC for the architecture and design work, and Gilbane Building Company for construction.

According to district officials, one of biggest changes with the new building would be a new pick-up and drop-off system for students.

The school district owns three properties on Dobson Street across from the school.

School is expected to remain open during construction , which will be done in phases, officials said.

‘Golden’ year for Niles high school teacher

Niles North High School teacher Pankaj Sharma was announced as a Golden Apple winner in April.

According to Sharma’s students, colleagues, and now members of the Golden Apple evaluation team, this 14-year Niles Township High School District 219 teacher makes students want to make the world a better place.

“It was obvious that there was no one who wasn’t positively impacted by him in some way,” said educator Monica Gil, who was on the Golden Apple team. “He had a positive impact it seems like on everyone.”

Sharma, who graduated from Niles Township High School District 219 and has been an instructor at Niles North or sister Niles West his entire career, teaches U.S. History, government, civics and modern African and Latin American histories.

“Sharma uses primary sources and discussion to imagine what the people during (earlier) times would have felt as events unfolded,” the committee said in announcing him as a Golden Apple winner. “He has a genuine enthusiasm for history and an authentic concern for his students, which is apparent in his classroom.”

The non-profit Golden Apple organization says it is committed to “celebrating and developing great teachers with the ability and passion to make life-changing differences in the lives of students.”

Recipients of the Golden Apple Award for Excellence in Teaching come from a pool of more than 400 nominations throughout Chicago and the surrounding suburbs, according to Golden Apple.

“It’s a very humbling thing,” the teacher said when he was surprised in his classroom with the award. “It’s a very nice thing. It’s a nice honor for our school and for our students. For me, it’s very surprising. ”

Some park district renovation plans moved ahead, or stalled

The Skokie Park District had a stop-and-start year in 2016 regarding major projects.

A big disappointment for the park district in 2016 came from the elimination — or at the very least long postponement — of a long-standing dream: development of Skokie Sports Park East near Oakton Street and McCormick Boulevard.

In spring, the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District, which owns the property, told Skokie park district officials that plans for Skokie Sports Park East are “now on hold indefinitely,” said park district Executive Director John Ohrlund

Skokie Park District administrators said they were informed by the water district that the property just east of the existing Skokie Sports Park had become a potential site for a phosphate treatment operation.

The park district, which leases two adjoining pieces of land from the MWRD, had been planning a multi-use sports facility on the 17-acre eastern half — waiting out an environmental cleanup of the site that had taken a few years to complete.

Skokie Sports Park’s golf range, miniature golf course and batting facility continue to operate on the west.

“One of the problems you run into when you don’t own the property and somebody else does is that they may have some different needs for it,” Ohrlund said.

The Skokie Park District had been narrowing in on a plan – both for the design of the park and for how it would be funded.

On the other hand, it was full speed ahead in 2016 for the renovation of the park district’s Weber Leisure Center.

Park board commissioners approved moving forward with a design plan for renovating the center, estimated to cost about $3.5 million.

According to park district officials, the extensive renovation throughout the building will increase program opportunities and revenue, improve customer service and control and provide an “aesthetic refresh” with budget consciousness in mind.

A smaller park district project authorized for 2016 was the renovation of Winnebago Park in the 8300 block of Knox Avenue. It was approved after neighbors complained about conditions there.

The park district renovates parks on a rotating basis and bumped up Winnebago on the schedule after the residents’ concerns were voiced, officials said.

The renovated park is expected to be ready in 2017 by late spring or early summer.

Read more at Skokie Review…

Chicago Tribune Editorial: Plan of Chicago: Sister Neighborhoods and Sister Strong

City Treasurer Kurt Summers has launched a “think tank” of leaders from all of the city’s 77 community areas. “We’re building bridges between neighborhoods,” he says. (E. Jason Wambsgans / Chicago Tribune)
City Treasurer Kurt Summers has launched a “think tank” of leaders from all of the city’s 77 community areas. “We’re building bridges between neighborhoods,” he says. (E. Jason Wambsgans / Chicago Tribune)

 

icago is a city of diverse neighborhoods, many of them struggling with joblessness, crime and deflated dreams. But they all share an asset: Each one brims with doers — innovators who have ambitious ideas to improve this city one block at a time.

Our Plan of Chicago project, now in its third year, promotes powerful homegrown ideas to boost education, create jobs and improve safety. These ideas come from business leaders and corner grocers, foundation panjandrums and the guy who lives in a bungalow down the street. Our current theme reflects our firm belief: Chicago Can Do This.

One idea quickly percolated to the top of our list: Create a Sister Neighborhoods program so thriving communities can help those that struggle. Among our inspirations was an Archdiocese of Chicago program in which parishes are linked together and assist one another.

Many Chicagoans eagerly step forward to help fellow residents in violence-wracked or job-starved areas. Similarly, every neighborhood has expertise and resources that could help another neighborhood. Yes, we know that neighborhoods vie for scarce resources from City Hall. But we also know that whenever a neighborhood thrives, so does Chicago.

Can neighborhoods of different needs and means help one another conquer their challenges? Can they align in partnerships that grow over time?

Think of these pairings as blind dates in which neighborhood leaders can discover shared goals and explore the ways to help each other.

Several such fix-ups are in the works, thanks to Chicago Treasurer/Sister Neighborhoods Matchmaker Kurt Summers. Summers tells us the Tribune’s Plan of Chicago series inspired him to launch a “think tank” of leaders from all of the city’s 77 community areas. “We’re building bridges between neighborhoods,” he says. “We know there are opportunities day in and day out. So let’s start building the muscle of communities working together.” Bravo, Mr. Treasurer.

In July, Summers gathered those “thought leaders” at the Chicago City Council chambers to kick-start his Sister Neighborhoods program. He wanted grass-roots energy and independent action, not government planning and stultifying bureaucracy.

Result: We’re happy to report that Chicago Can Do — And Is Doing — This.

Two of Summers’ matches already have bloomed:

When Avondale met Englewood

When Glen Fulton, of Englewood on the South Side, met Margaret Ptaszynska, of Avondale on the Northwest Side, the attraction was mutual. Fulton is executive director of the Greater Englewood Community Development Corp., which last spring launched a new small business accelerator, a place that helps more than 50 entrepreneurs grow their businesses.

Ptaszynska, who leads the Greater Avondale Chamber of Commerce, strives to help companies in her neighborhood, known for its large Polish community and a growing Hispanic population, plant their flags in new places.

Their first order of business: Fulton led a tour of Englewood to show Ptaszynska potential opportunities. “One of the things that Margaret and I are talking about is creating incentives for businesses that want to come to Englewood,” he says, acknowledging that the neighborhood’s reputation for crime and poverty could scare away some companies. “Historically, we have had a bad reputation, and the conversation has been a negative one,” he tells us. “But we are changing that conversation with the business accelerator.”

The two leaders set a course. They would build a small-business exchange. The goal is to help Englewood business owners who want to expand in Avondale, and vice versa.

Fulton envisions cross-learning experiences, so that businesses can share with each other on a wide range of subjects: financial literacy, loan opportunities, finding and exploiting resources. In other words, a business exchange of ideas, tips and eventually businesses.

Ptaszynska tells us that she has an Avondale medical training institute that’s quite interested in opening a location in Englewood.

“It’s just the beginning of the conversation,” she says, “but the general idea of this partnership is really good and helpful.”

When Albany Park met West Rogers Park

Summers’ summit brought together a second serendipitous pairing: Rodney Walker, executive director of the Albany Park Community Center, and Shalom Klein, executive director of the Jewish Community Council of West Rogers Park. Albany Park had successfully lobbied for a new library; West Rogers Park seeks to persuade the city to replace a 1960s-era library at 6435 N. California Ave.

“We are following the playbook of communities like Albany Park,” Klein tells us. “They said, if you want to talk to someone who can make this happen, we can help.”

Albany Park officials connected Klein with Chinatown officials and others who have learned the ways of clout to get a library built.

“What it boils down to is we are engaged in conversations and in learning that without Sister Neighborhoods, we would have never known,” Klein tells us. “If we want a library, we should be talking to people who have advocated successfully for a library.”

So far, a West Rogers Park petition drive has gathered more than 1,300 signatures in two months. A newly organized committee is bringing together a diverse group of business and civic organizations to push for the library.

Chicago Public Library Commissioner Brian Bannon has noticed. “The ingredient of a strong community desire (for a new library) is always important when making a decision about neighborhood improvement. Not only do we love it, but we think it is important that a community is engaged and actively interested in seeking improved services.”

And what benefits flow back to Albany Park? Walker says he is confident those will come. “We are just beginning to learn what other organizations do — which services they provide in their communities and how we could leverage those resources moving forward,” Walker tells us. Also as a result of Sister Neighborhoods, these two are planning a networking event between the business owners of their communities.

Yes, this is just beginning. Connections beget connections. Solutions evolve and spread. Neighborhood leaders learn how to deal with their own communities’ struggles.

Sister Neighborhoods initiatives may expand beyond Summers and his 77 thought leaders. There’s another group, formed in 2013 after our first Plan of Chicago series, that is in talks with the Chicago Community Trust to launch a similar effort. We are watching them with high hopes.

Can your community, your group, offer or profit from your own blind date? Matchmaker Summers is easy to find. And he has plenty of potential mates for you and yours.

Read more at Chicago Tribune…

 

 

Skokie mayor: Menorah lighting event a gesture of hope, unity

Rabbi Yochanan Posner of Lubavitch Chabad in Skokie lights the menorah of Hanukkah during the communitywide Menorah Lighting event Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2016 at Krier Plaza in downtown Skokie. (Karie Angell Luc / Pioneer Press)
Rabbi Yochanan Posner of Lubavitch Chabad in Skokie lights the menorah of Hanukkah during the communitywide Menorah Lighting event Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2016 at Krier Plaza in downtown Skokie. (Karie Angell Luc / Pioneer Press)

The annual menorah lighting in downtown Skokie is a yearly reminder for Rabbi Yochanan Posner how fortunate he is to be an American and to be able to practice his religion in public.

Several dozen attendees came out Dec. 28 on the fifth night of Hanukkah this year to enjoy the prayer, songs, latkes and donuts and a fire dancer.

The event took place at Skokie’s Site of Civic Pride. It’s where, for over three decades, representatives from the village and Lubavitch Chabad of Skokie have celebrated the Jewish holiday with the lighting a traditional menorah and also an electric menorah that stands roughly six-feet tall in the public square.

Skokie Mayor George Van Dusen addressed the crowd gathered and noted that various other representatives of the local government, including village manager John Lockerby, had come out to join in the festivities

Posner, who leads holiday celebrations and education programs at Lubavitch Chabad, said he remembers coming with his father, Rabbi Yosef Posner, director of the Chad, to prepare for the annual public celebration as far back as the early 1980s. The event is especially meaningful to him because many of his Jewish relatives in Russia and Poland had to hide their faith from public view or risk persecution, he said.

Of all the Jewish holidays, Posner said Hanukkah is most representative of outreach to the greater public and a menorah lighting that’s open to all, no matter their faith, is a perfect way to celebrate the “festival of lights.”

Attendees — who ranged in age from infants to older adults — gathered around the latkes, also known as potato pancakes, and the donuts, both of which are foods typically eaten during the Hanukah holiday, chatted between the prayers, songs and the featured entertainment of the night: A fire dancer who spun around various flaming batons. A man dressed in a dreidel costume — the small four-sided spinning top bearing letters of the Hebrew alphabet often present during Hanukkah celebrations — posed for photos with the attendees.

In an address to the crowd, Van Dusen reminded attendees that celebrations like this are a illustration of Skokie’s commitment to a diverse and unified community.

“We live in very challenging and very difficult times,” he said. “Change is afoot and we don’t know what change is coming.”

Community unity provides “the kind of stability that will ensure our great future” no matter what changes come down the pike, Van Dusen said.

Skokie resident Debbie Holstein, 42, who attended the event with her parents and a family friend, said she did so because the celebration was a way for her to recognize and celebrate the right to religious freedom she and her fellow Americans are afforded.

Posner said he agreed with the mayor’s statement about the uncertain times both domestically and abroad.

He said he can’t tackle all the world’s problems and the best he can do is to “illuminate” the community with a “good and positive message.” The yearly menorah lighting allows him to do that in Skokie, he said.

After all, Posner said, the best way to fight darkness is with light.

Lee V. Gaines is a freelancer.

Read more at the Skokie Review…

Working on training for the Las Vegas marathon in support of Chicago Yachad

….and the training for the Las Vegas 1/2 Marathon 2017 for Team Yachad continues…..
The hardest/most awkward part is having to ask for support….but I do it because I believe in the cause and want to be an active participant in supporting inclusion for young adults with special needs!
If you have already supported my run….thank you so much!!!
and if not……
https://vegas.teamyachad.com/runner/syklein
#TeamYachad #Inclusion15337509_10154608225405991_220816878724510851_n