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South Central Reporter

Sunday, November 24, 2024

Central A&M Community Unit School District 21 Board of Education met June 27

Central A&M Community Unit School District 21 Board of Education met June 27.

Here are the minutes provided by the board:

The Citizens’ Community Enhancement Commission (CCEC) held a regular meeting in the Second Floor Training Room of the DeKalb Police Department,  700 West Lincoln Highway, DeKalb, Illinois. 

Chair Brad Hoey called the meeting to order at 4:03 p.m. 

A. ROLL CALL 

Roll call was recorded by Management Analyst Scott Zak and the following members of the CCEC were present: Chair Brad Hoey and Commissioners Melissa Beck, Aaron  Robertson and Helen Umbdenstock. Commissioner Ellingsworth Webb joined the  meeting after the roll call. Absent were: Commissioners Kenneth Brown and Jeanine  Holcomb. Also present were Mayor Cohen Barnes and City Council Liaison Scott  McAdams. 

B. APPROVAL OF AGENDA – ADDITIONS/DELETIONS 

MOTION 

Ms. Umbdenstock motioned to approve the agenda, seconded by Ms. Beck. VOTE 

The agenda was approved by unanimous voice vote. 

C. APPROVAL OF MINUTES – JUNE 13, 2022 

MOTION 

Ms. Beck motioned to approve the minutes, seconded by Mr. Robertson. VOTE 

The minutes were approved by unanimous voice vote. 

D. PUBLIC PARTICIPATION 

No public comments were received. 

E. NEW BUSINESS 

1. RECOMMENDATIONS ON PUBLIC MURAL PROJECTS 

Chair Hoey said the Commission received a decent number of mural applications in the 5 ½-week period between the release of the Call for Artists and the deadline and that he like the mix of applications, including some from NIU and  others of the area and out of the state. He noted even if a design does not fit the  City-owned mural sites listed in the Call for Artists, there could be opportunities to  use it elsewhere. 

Mayor Barnes was pleased with the applications and noted that the downtown  brewpub Keg and Kernel recently put up a mural towards the rear of their  restaurant that was done by producing a vinyl wrap. He noted framed wraps  could be used in the Annie Glidden Road underpass and designed my NIU. 

Mr. Zak presented a slide show of the 13 mural designs submitted for the south  wall of City Hall, noting the proposed budget, items missing from the line-item  budget and whether the artist had mural experience. 

The Commissioners ranked their preferences. The design by Janelle O’Malley,  Dean Kreuger, April White and Veronica Storc, who are NIU employees and  students, showing the text “DeKalb” and two hands over a map of the City was  the top pick in the first vote. Tied for second were the design by CJ Hungerman,  which featured large, colorful flowers, and the design by Randy Halverson, which  says, “Welcome to DeKalb” and features flowers and crows. 

Mr. Webb said the NIU group’s design was ideal for City Hall. Mayor Barnes said  it lacked color, and Chair Hoey agreed it was not bold and suggested the  possibility of contacting the artists to make adjustments to the design. 

Regarding Mr. Hungerman’s design, Ms. Beck questioned why one corner  featured geometric shapes rather than color, and Mr. Webb said he liked that the  design prompted questions. Ms. Umbdenstock suggested that if the Commission  liked a large flower design, that it consider the design by Katherine Katz and  Summer Blahnick-Kiener, which says, “kindness grows here,” and feature large  colorful flowers, since they are local artists. 

The Commission took a second vote between just the top three finishers. Mr.  Hungerman’s flower design was the top choice. 

Mayor Cohen Barnes left the meeting, and City Manager Bill Nicklas joined the  meeting at 4:54 p.m. 

Mr. Nicklas said that when the mural design goes before the City Council, he will  provide two choices, providing some flexibility. 

The discussion turned to the mural proposals for the Annie Glidden Road  underpass. 

Mr. Zak shared that Mayor Barnes’ preference is to work with NIU on a design  instead of using one of the submissions from the Call for Artists.

Mr. Zak then presented a slideshow of the six submissions for the walls of the  underpass. 

City Manager Nicklas suggested NIU should be incorporated into the design  since that is a large part of welcoming people to the community. Alderman  McAdams said designs without references to NIU, such as those with flowers,  could be used other places. Chair Hoey added that the Call for Artists was clear  the underpass designs should have included a welcoming message and  community spirit, and only two did so. 

The Commission voted on their preference. Their top choice was the design by  Carol Ann Boecker which shows Altgeld Hall and the DeKalb ear of corn on one  end of the east wall and corn and a Huskie running on one end of the west wall. The second choice was the design by Stephanie Irving, which covered one wall and included the silhouettes of DeKalb and NIU landmarks and rays of blue,  purple and orange behind them. 

2. RECOMMENDATIONS ON UTILITY BOX ARTWORK PROJECTS 

Mr. Zak presented a slideshow with the three designs for the Palmer Court utility  box, three designs for the Van Buer Plaza box and the single design for the  Vaughn Parking Lot box. 

Three of the designs included the DeKalb County United logo, and Mr. Nicklas  said promotion of the soccer club could not be included. Ms. Umbdenstock  suggested the design could still be used with the logo removed. The artist will be  asked if she is agreeable to that. 

The Commission to recommended Amanda Groff’s design with a dreaming  Huskie for Palmer Court, Rudy Galindo’s painting of a vase with flowers for Van  Buer Plaza and Jennifer Ramczyk’s design featuring soccer and corn for the  Vaughn Parking Lot 

3. APPROVE PAINT-A-PLUG APPLICATIONS 

The Commission approved designs submitted for the fire hydrants at 6  Arrowhead Lane and 736 Haish Boulevard. 

The discussion returned to the mural recommendations, and Mr. Nicklas  provided further explanation on why he would provide a second option to the City  Council for the City Hall mural. He complimented the Commission on its work  gathering submissions and said the Commission’s favored City Hall submission  would look good somewhere in the City while suggesting the theme of belonging  should be incorporated in the City Hall mural. He said the Belonging movement is  important to the City and it needs to be shown it is not a passing fancy. He says  the City Hall mural should represent the spirit of the City and that spirit is  belonging.

Chair Hoey said he would like belonging to be a theme in all projects and noted  the T-Mobile grant application incorporated the theme. 

4. DISCUSSION ON OLD PAINT-A-PLUG PROJECTS 

Ms. Beck explained some of the first fire hydrants painted for the initiative are in  bad shape with much of the paint chipped away. Specifically, the hydrants at  Fourth and Oak Street and Oak and First Street were discussed. It was agreed  that the artists for those hydrants will be contacted to see if they want to recreate  their designs. 

5. DISCUSSION ON ANNIE GLIDDEN ROAD MEDIANS 

Based on the Commission’s discussion last month on the need to improve the  conditions of the medians on South Annie Glidden Road, Mr. Zak shared  Assistant Public Works Director Andy Raih was open to low-maintenance ideas.  Mr. Nicklas noted the City does not have a landscape crew and that it would be  ideal if someone adopted that stretch of the roadway. Mr. Webb said he would  ask his Kiwanis group if they would be interested in doing that. 

Mr. Nicklas said another spot that needs attention is a triangle island in one of  the crossings at First Street and Lincoln Highway, noting it has some plants that  get hit hard in the winter and that filling the island with concrete is an option. Ms.  Umbdenstock suggested a more artistic approach, such as an iron sculpture. 

F. OLD BUSINESS 

1. CITY OF DEKALB/NIU COLLAB NEA GRANT UPDATE 

Chair Hoey shared the application for an NEA grant to fund Huskie sculptures  was being postponed until next year. He explained the cost of the project and  how the cost would be shared is not certain yet and proceeding with those  ambiguities could hurt the application’s chances. Chair Hoey shared an e-mail  from NIU Dean of College of Visual and Performing Arts explaining the  postponement, including the desire to create a 3D model of the sculpture for the  application. 

2. VETERANS MURAL 

Mr. Robertson shared the artist he was working with for the mural is no longer  interested. Ms. Umbdenstock suggested asking the artists who responded to the  Call for Artist to submit a Veterans Mural. Chair Hoey said the mural will now  likely happen next year as a result of the new circumstances. 

3. LET’S MOVE TO THE MUSIC UPDATE 

Ms. Umbdenstock shared she is arranging a meeting regarding the project with  the owner of Blumen Gardens and then she will contact Facebook and Ferrara.

5. OTHER UPDATES 

Mr. Nicklas said the project to narrow Lincoln Highway and make the downtown  more pedestrian friendly will be done before Corn Fest. He said new downtown  parking signs are being created and that while the crosswalks will only be striped  this year, some more art could be done in the crosswalks in the future. He said  he would also like to see 3D art created on every block to draw people  downtown. The Commission strongly supported the idea. 

G. ADJOURNMENT 

MOTION 

Mr. Webb motioned to adjourn the meeting, seconded by Mr. Robertson. VOTE 

The motion was approved by unanimous voice vote, and the meeting was adjourned at  6:03 p.m. 

 https://www.camraiders.com/vimages/shared/vnews/stories/58fe735a30dff/June%20Regular%20Meeting.pdf

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