Bacteria levels high at suburban beaches?

Reported by Jake Griffin, Daily Herald

Bacteria counts were so high in Woods Creek Lake at Indian Trail Beach in Lake in the Hills last year that swimming was banned for eight days.

That’s despite test results that show the beach should have been closed for 10 days.

Due to a lag in the time it takes the state to test water samples, beachgoers may be frolicking in filth. Illinois Department of Public Health officials said it can take as much as two days for test results on water samples with dangerously high bacteria levels to be discovered.

“That’s one of the flaws in the system,” said Melaney Arnold, IDPH spokeswoman.

According to IDPH records, water samples from 150 lake beaches in Cook, Kane, Lake and McHenry counties tested above the closure threshold 253 times in 2012. In most cases, those beaches were open during times when the bacteria levels would have mandated closure. There are no swimming beaches in DuPage County requiring the state to test.

Additionally, since water at most inland lake beaches is tested only twice a month, swimmers may spend days in contaminated water and never know it. Water at Lake Michigan beaches is tested with greater frequency, which partially accounts for a higher rate of contamination, health officials explained.

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source: http://www.dailyherald.com/article/20130612/news/706129928/

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Funding for Proposed South Suburban Projects Get Preliminary OK

By:  Andrea Holecek
Source: NWI Times

Calumet City, Lansing, Burnham, Riverdale, Thornton Township and Glenwood are among the proposed recipients of 2013 Community Development Block Grant Funds.

The Cook County Community Development Advisory Board on Tuesday approved 29 requests from local communities and townships totaling $4,866.880 in Capital Improvement Projects from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Renewal’s CDBG program.

The Advisory Council also approved $1.8 million in funding for planning and administration of the grants and grants of $882,202 for unemployment assistance and affordable housing through HUD’s Emergency Solutions Grant program.

The proposed projects will be presented to the Cook County Board in June and on its agenda for approval at the board’s July meeting.

Awards for street improvement are slated for: Calumet City ($140,000); Burnham ($75,000); Lansing ($200,000) and Riverdale ($280,000). Glenwood is slated to receive $100,000 for sanitary sewer and water system repairs while Thornton Township’s proposed $100,000 grant would be used for parking lot reconstruction and installation of automated doors at its Senior Center.

Although Cook County hasn’t received its total allocation this program year because of the sequester, the county expects there will be a slight decrease in funding for the Capital Improvement program, and a slight increase in the Emergency Solutions grant, said program Director Maria Choca Urban.

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DuPage Spelling Champ Heading to National Competition

By: Marie Wilson
Source: Daily Herald

One super speller from DuPage County will be heading to Washington, D.C., to compete in the Scripps National Spelling Bee Finals May 28-30.

Richard Moraga, a Wood Dale resident in eighth grade at St. Pius X School in Lombard, was honored Thursday for winning the DuPage County spelling bee and earning a chance to compete nationally.

Richard and two others — suburban Cook County winner Alia Abiad, a Western Springs seventh-grader, and Will County winner Meghana Kamineni, a Lockport seventh-grader — were recognized for their achievements during a pep rally at the ComEd Commercial Center in Oak Brook.
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Cook County Jail Reports Lice And Scabies Outbreak

By: Robert Herriman
Source: Global Dispatch

Cook County Sheriff Thomas J. Dart has ordered isolation within a Division of the Cook County Jail and a portion of Cermak Hospital after an outbreak of lice and scabies, according to a press release Friday.

At least 15 detainees have been diagnosed with the ectoparasite infestations.

Sheriff Dart says the isolation order will remain in place until further notice. Affected detainees have been isolated from the general population to allow for theirtreatment and to prevent further infestation. Detainees housed in the affected units are also being provided preventative treatment.

The units are being disinfected and detainees are being provided new linens and clothing. Linens are being laundered separately. Staff assigned to the affected units are also being closely monitored.

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Sheriff Tom Dart Proposes Cook County Concealed-Carry Ordinance

By: Frank Main
Source: Sun-Times

Sheriff Tom Dart said Sunday that he is proposing a concealed-carry gun ordinance to keep Cook County from becoming the “Wild West.”

Dart said he’s worried about a stalemate in the General Assembly on a law to license people to carry concealed guns. If legislators don’t meet a June 9 court deadline to pass such a law, anyone with a state firearm owner’s identification card could legally walk anywhere in public with a concealed weapon, Dart said.

“We would have the Wild West,” he said. “There would be no regulation.”

Dart said he’s proposing a concealed-carry law for Cook County that would take effect only if the General Assembly failed to act by June 9 and the court didn’t extend the deadline.

“I was in Springfield for 11 years,” Dart said of his time as a legislator. “Deadlines sometimes don’t mean anything. We have to be prepared in the event something does not get done.”

Dart’s ordinance would give him the power to approve and reject licenses to carry concealed guns in Cook County. Applicants would have to pay a $300 fee for a license.

Dart said he thinks the ordinance would apply not only to Cook County suburbs, but also to the city of Chicago in the absence of a state law governing concealed carrying of guns.

Chicago Police spokesman Adam Collins said: “If a statewide law is not passed, the city is preparing to implement a comprehensive concealed-carry ordinance to ensure that guns stay out of the hands of criminals.”

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Financial Relief Available for Flood Victims

By: Monifa Thomas
Source: Sun-Times

In the wake of what Gov. Pat Quinn called the most pervasive flood in Illinois since 1818, county, state and federal officials began the process Monday of trying to reach out to victims of the April floods in need of financial aid.

Teams from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the Illinois Emergency Management Association and the U.S. Small Business Administration were dispatched to assess flood-damaged homes in Cook, Lake and DuPage counties on Monday, after Quinn sent a letter to FEMA on April 22 requesting assistance.

Data collected during the assessment will be included in a follow-up request by Quinn for federal assistance that, if approved, could provide small-interest loans and federal grants.

Quinn also declared a total of 48 counties state disaster area because of the flooding that began on April 18, including Cook, DuPage, Lake, Kane, McHenry and Will.

The state disaster declaration makes available a range of resources that are supposed to help communities recover from flooding, such as allowing more than 3,600 inmates to either assist with filling sandbags. Quinn, who spoke in front of the once-flooded North Branch of the Chicago River in Chicago’s Albany Park neighborhood, said, “We’ve never had, in our whole state of Illinois in its history since 1818, such a pervasive flood in so many different parts of Illinois.”

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Homeless man charged with 27 counts of burglary

Reported by Lee Filas, Daily Herald

DuPage County Sheriff officials announced Friday that a homeless man has been charged with 27 counts of burglary for stealing from storage units in unincorporated DuPage County near Hanover Park.

David A. Udaundo, 41, is expected to answer the charges in bond court later this morning, DuPage County Sheriff John E. Zaruba announced in a news release.

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source: http://www.dailyherald.com/article/20130315/news/703159857/?interstitial=1

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7-year-old boy rescued from Des Plaines River

Reported by Sara Hooker, Daily Herald

An off-duty Evanston police officer is being called a hero after he jumped into the Des Plaines River Tuesday afternoon to rescue a 7-year-old boy.

The officer was driving near the dam at Joseph Schwab Road at about 3:40 p.m. when he watched the little boy approach the river and throw in a snowball, said Des Plaines Fire Chief Alan Wax.

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source: http://www.dailyherald.com/article/20130305/news/703059623/

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Cigarettes $1 more per pack in Cook County

Reported by the Associated Press

Taxes on cigarettes sold in Cook County have gone up by $1 a pack.

Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle says the tax, which took effect Friday, is expected to generate more than $25 million annually for the Cook County Health and Hospitals System.

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source: http://www.dailyherald.com/article/20130301/news/703019906/

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Car crashes into Streamwood home

Reported by By Justin Kmitch, Daily Herald

A Chevy Monte Carlo, driven by an unidentified male, had crashed through the cinder block wall of her single-family raised ranch home in the 900 block of Meadow Lane and landed entirely in her basement.

Gibb was too shaken up to talk about the accident Saturday evening, but her son Dean Cichon was able to provide some details.

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source: http://www.dailyherald.com/article/20130216/news/702169860/

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