


Pandemic prominent, but a lot of other big news in Southland



While the COVID-19 pandemic dominated headlines around the world and in the Southland in 2020, there were many other noteworthy news stories.
Warehouses began sprouting up throughout the south and southwest suburbs and more were approved for construction. A powerful derecho caused extensive damage in the region and left nearly all of Harvey without electricity for several days.
Cook County prosecutors decided to not bring charges against a police officer in the 2018 shooting death of a security guard outside a Robbins nightclub, and the death of George Floyd May 25 at the hands of Minneapolis police led to demonstrations against racial intolerance in communities including Orland Park, Frankfort and Tinley Park.
Johanna Taylor, a recent graduate of Lincoln-Way Central High School, and her mom, Terra, used social media to organize a June 4 protest that drew
Leading up to the demonstration, social media was alive with comments both supportive as well as fearful that the event might devolve into violence that marred other Chicago area demonstrations.
Some urged New Lenox Mayor Tim Baldermann to stop the event. Baldermann, a former police officer and police chief, instead took to social media to ask commenters to stop “fanning the flames of anger and anxiety.”
“If something does happen here, some young woman asking people to join her in a peaceful way won’t be to blame,” the mayor wrote.
On June 8, Gov. J.B. Pritzker marched with an estimated
Before leading marchers to Matteson’s Unity Bridge over Interstate 57, Pritzker said leaders “have to repair the damage that’s been done to Black communities around the state” through reinvestment.
Pritzker said too many communities of color had “seen nothing or very little over the years” in terms of investment in health care and education.
Pritzker faced criticism for joining marchers, with many Republicans saying his presence endorsed what seemed to have been a violation of the his executive orders banning large gatherings.
In early August, south and southwest suburban police departments
Highway exit ramps were closed at locations in the south suburbs on Interstate 80/94 and the Bishop Ford Freeway. Businesses along the busy Halsted Street retail corridor in Homewood were ordered closed, with municipal vehicles and concrete blocks in place to block access to businesses.
In Calumet City, dirt was hastily piled at some entrances to River Oaks, which had sustained extensive damage on May 31, when
Floyd’s death also prompted Southland leaders to address lingering symbols of what many saw as racist.
In late August, the Thornton Fractional Township High School District 215 Board voted to
The vote came after a survey showed nearly 70% of students said they supported changing the nickname, chosen in 1958 after the district was divided into North and South high schools. The new school adopted the imagery of the Confederacy, including a Confederate battle flag as its banner and a Confederate soldier as its mascot.
In early October, the family of security guard Jemel Roberson, shot and killed during a chaotic 2018 confrontation outside a Robbins nightclub, learned
State’s Attorney Kim Foxx said that her office had concluded “that the totality of the evidence is insufficient to support criminal charges” against officer Ian Covey.
Roberson, 26, had been working security at
In the chaos, Roberson managed to detain a man witnesses identified as a shooter and was holding him on the ground at gunpoint when Covey arrived armed with an AR-15 rifle. Covey ordered Roberson to drop the gun and fired on him when he didn’t comply, according to state police.
Witnesses said the officer did not give Roberson adequate time to respond to his verbal commands and ignored their warnings that Roberson was a security guard, not a suspect.
Roberson’s mother, Beatrice Roberson, said at a news conference the decision from the state’s attorney’s office “devastated” her and that “Kim Foxx and her office has let my family down.”
Amazon adds fulfillment centers
In what is expected to generate at least 3,000 jobs, Amazon got underway this year with massive fulfillment centers in
The jobs are promising salaries of at least $15 an hour, and officials see benefits for businesses such as restaurants and gas stations that the workers could patronize.
The Better Government Association and public radio station WBEZ-FM tallied the value of tax breaks granted by Markham, Matteson, University Park and other Chicago area municipalities where the online retailer has recently built or is building facilities.
The incentives were valued at $741 million, the study found, noting big disparities in the size of incentives between communities of color where Amazon is building and predominantly white communities.
Daily Southtown columnist Ted Slowik,
Police chief changes
On Aug. 1,
McCarthy had been chief since 1994 and was part of the Secret Service detail protecting Reagan when he left the Washington Hilton Hotel on March 30, 1981, and John Hinckley Jr. opened fire.
Joseph Mitchell, Orland Park’s deputy chief, was
In November, neighboring
Vaccaro had been chief since March 2014 and previously spent 24 years with the Tinley Park Police Department, serving as deputy chief before being hired by Mokena. He was suspended after patrol officers and sergeants on Mokena’s police force sent a letter to village officials saying they
Mokena had hired an outside law firm to investigate the matter, which was in the preliminary stage, then called off once .
In early September, officials in
Mike Blaha, the Orland Hills Police Department’s deputy chief, was named as interim chief. Scully previously was police administrator for the department before being named chief in late September 2007. He previously served as police chief in Crestwood, leaving that post in September 2005.
Storm causes extensive damage
An
Virtually all of Harvey was without electricity following what that
The National Weather Service reported a tornado that packed winds of 100 mph tore through Oak Forest and Midlothian, then unleashed 90 mph straight-line winds in Harvey.
Leadership woes
In mid-May, Governors State University picked a successor to embattled President Elaine Maimon, who retired at the end of June amid the fallout of a $1.5 million payroll scandal.
Faculty and students at GSU had
In early August, Crestwood’s mayor came under
Federal prosecutors said Lou Presta was caught on a March 2018 recording accepting an envelope with $5,000 cash from a representative of the red-light camera firm, and then lied to the FBI and IRS when asked about it that September.
Presta, first elected in 2013 and seeking reelection in April, has pleaded not guilty to charges that include using a facility in interstate commerce in aid of bribery and official misconduct, willfully filing a false income tax return, willfully failing to file an income tax return and making false statements to the FBI and IRS.
In late June, the estate of Dr. Van Koinis, an Evergreen Park pediatrician who had committed suicide, was
The Cook County sheriff’s office
The sheriff’s office earlier this year notified families of the doctor’s patients that their children
Homer roads dispute
In early December,
The action came as Homer Glen officials approved an agreement with the township road commissioner to transfer the road district’s assets to the village and approved a $1.5 million tax levy to pay for public works services.
The road district, a separate entity from the village and township, collects taxes from all township residents, but only maintains roads in Homer Glen and unincorporated areas. Roads within the municipal boundaries of Lockport, Lemont and New Lenox are maintained by those municipalities’ respective public works departments.
Homer Glen was working with township Road District Commissioner Mike DeVivo on a
In September,
The vicar general of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago, Hicks was born in Harvey, raised in South Holland and served for about four years at Saint Elizabeth Seton Parish in Orland Hills.
Work began in late August
The $2.3 million project repositioned rail crossing gates closer to the tracks, meant to eliminate a hazard in which vehicles become pinned after the gates come down. In the two collisions, a gate came down behind or on top of vehicles as they waited at a stoplight.
In the 3rd Congressional District Democratic primary in March, U.S. Rep. Dan Lipinski, who had held the seat since 2005, lost Marie Newman, acknowledging after his defeat that
Newman vastly outspent Lipinski on TV commercials in which she contrasted their views on abortion, and she went on to defeat Republican challenger Mike Fricilone in the November election.
In late October, Illinois Gaming Board officials said a
The gaming board was
Calumet City has proposed using part of the River Oaks shopping center at Torrence Avenue east of Interstate 94, for a casino and related development; a site at the interchange of Halsted Street and I-80/294 that straddles the border of East Hazel Crest and Homewood is also among the applicants as are sites in Lynwood and Matteson.
Notable Southland deaths
Early on Thanksgiving Day, Frankfort native
Mary Margaret “Maggie” Crotty, most recently Bremen Township supervisor and a former longtime state legislator representing the south suburbs,
Crotty in September
Following a years-long battle against prostate cancer, Will County Executive Larry Walsh
The Elwood farmer began his political career at 21 when he joined the Elwood school board in 1970. In 1973, he was elected as Jackson Township supervisor, a position he held until December 2004.
Walsh served on the Will County Board in 1974 and again in 1992, and in the Illinois Senate from April 1997 until January 2005, when he took office as Will County executive. He was diagnosed with cancer in 2014.
One of the south suburbs’ longest-serving mayors, Steger’s Lou Sherman,
Born on Christmas Day in 1927, Sherman served in the Army during World War II and is a past president of the South Suburban Mayors and Managers Association. He formerly served as a board member of the Illinois Municipal League.