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Archive for the ‘Arlington Heights’

Master Arborist Wayne White Due for Second Treatment of Emerald Ash Borer Insecticide

May 18, 2012 By: Cal Skinner Category: Advertising, Arlington Heights, Ash, Ash Borer, CCAPOA, Country Club Property Owners Association, Downers Grove, Emerald Ash Borer, Master Abrorrist, Roselle, Tree, Wayne White, West Chicago

Here is the ash tree that shades our home during the summer.

I sent my April 23rd storyto Wayne White, the Board Certified Master Arborist who is going to make my ask tree probably the only one left in Crystal Lake’s and Lakewood’s Country Club Additions subdivision to see if I had made any mistakes and he sent me the following email.

Here's my neighbor's ash tree. I figure my back yard will soon have a lot more sun during the morning.

From the progress of the leafing on the ask tree over our home, I sense that it about time for him to make his second sweep through Northern Illinois and Southern Wisconsin. He usually makes his second sweep in June, but the season is advanced about a month by my estimate.

"Chop 'em down" is the strategy of Lake in the Hills, as this sign indicates. Click to enlarge any image.

If you want to see what he does, this 2008 article has enough photos to show you.

This time he will be injecting the insecticide to keep the Emerald Ash Borers away into the cambium of the tree (the part of the tree that draws nutrients up to the branches), as well as spraying around the tree trunk again.

In any event, here’s what he wrote:

“Awesome story as usual…. one thing I have to compliment you on (you deserve many of course) is that unlike many other newspaper reporters I have run into over the years, you have a knack for getting the details right.

“I enjoy reading your articles as they tell the whole story without any embellishment or mistakes.

“Well done – I knew that if I had time you would have loved a picture of my new truck.

“Actually a 1998 F350 dually but it is completely wrapped in EAB fighting theme.

“For the first time I am so busy I need help and my two daughters are both working for me now.

“Both licensed with Illinois for Pesticide applications.

The directors of Country Club Property Owners Association apparently didn't heed the warnings about the Emerad Ash Borer.

“My youngest Melinda was involved doing the entire City of West Chicago contract this year. They have renewed my contract for the next 6 years for approx 1800 street tree ash.

“Roselle renewed this year for both the city and the park district (over 600 and 200 respectively).

“I also got back Downers Grove for the third year.

“Roselle is thrilled as they had a third party consultant review the ash trees in the city this year that were treated by me last year and it appears that 99% of them survived even in the face of an exploding insect population last year.

“As the first year is the hardest one to get through when starting treatment – we are well on our way to a huge success story brewing there over the next few years.

“Two weeks after my story about Arlington heights hit google alerts – the city council there voted to reimburse residents $50 per tree (one time only) for treatment of trunk injection ONLY with TreeAge – their favored treatment method.

“Why they would favor one treatment over another when they know nothing about what works is ridiculous but I feel I may have had something to do with their decision as MANY residents read my story about them and were up in arms……. It reminded me instantly of you and your never ending passion for writing on the web.

“It works. If you search ‘emerald ash borer treatment’ on google, yahoo, or bing, I come up on page one of free listings.

Here's how CCAPOA attacked the Emerald Ash Borer problem near the Lakewood's Gate 7 Beach boat ramp.

There's still time to call and make an appointment to have your ash tree treated.

“Even my website has grown in importance with google etc.

“The fact you link to it is HUGE as your site is of major importance to google because of your readership.”

= = = = =
This was not a paid advertisement for the value of advertising on McHenry County Blog, but I do trade Wayne White his company’s ad for keeping it alive.

Got something to trade and want a better Google listing, shoot me an email.

The Ash Tree Savior Comes for His First Emerald Ash Borer Preventative Treatment

April 23, 2012 By: Cal Skinner Category: Arlington Heights, Ash, Ash Borer, Naperville, Wayne White

Spring came late last year to McHenry County and so did Master Arborist Waye White.

Master Arborist Wayne White was in town today spraying insecticide around the trunk of the ash tree that shades our bedroom.

He was so busy, he wrote on a note I found by my front door, that he didn’t have time to stop and chat as he usually does.

As luck would have it, you can see what he did last May 8th in the photo to the right.

Cities all over the Chicagoland area have just given up on saving their ash trees.

The Chicago Tribune ran an article on what one of the larger suburbs, Arlington Height, is doing to cope with the infestation.

No preventative treatment for Arlington Heights.

No siree.

Instead they are talking about borrowing $11.5 million to remove and replace those ash trees.

13,000 city parkway ash trees.

Having apparently done nothing to prevent the spreak of the Emerald Ash Borer, Arlington Heights was talking about borrowing $11.5 million to cut down its ask trees. Note that village officials are planning to replace old debt with new debt. No mention is made the village tax bill would be cut if preventative action had been taken.

White was contacted by neighbors disturbed at seeing 177 ash trees marked for removal and drove from Michigan to speak to residents.

White discovered that treatment couldn’t be financed by a bond issue, but could pay for cutting down the trees and planting newer (of course, smaller) ones.

And the village fathers did find $2 million to start the destructive process in 2012.

“The grim reality is that you CAN get huge sums of money by borrowing and mortgaging your city’s future when it is faced with a catastrophic situation,” White wrote in an article on his web site.

“Namely the safety of the community when the dying and dead ash trees threaten life and property because they are very dangerous when they die and left standing.”

Unlike Arlington Heights, Naperville is treating parkway trees that can be saved, according to the recently issued “Naperville Connected” newsletter.

“In order to prevent the further spread of the emerald ash borer a containment strategy has been developed which consists of removing parkway ash trees that cannot be saved and treating the remaining parkway ash trees citywide.

“The treatment of the healthy parkway ash trees will begin in April and continue until July.”

White will return to the area in early June (maybe late May with this year’s early spring) to inject insecticide into the ground and the cambium of the tree trunk.

The areas under attack by the Emeral Ash Borer as of 2012.

If you live in an area threatened by this tree-killing insect, you might want to give Wayne White a call…before you face the problem Arlington Heights residents met when they saw their trees marked for destruction.

You can see here what White has been able to do to save ash trees on airport property near Detroit compared to what happened across the street in a residential neighborhood where there was no preventative action taken.

More detailed information, complete with pictures, about what White does to treat an ash tree in late May or June in normal years can be seen in this article.

Rick Santorum Coming Closer to Crystal Lake–Arlington Heights

March 13, 2012 By: Cal Skinner Category: Arlington Heights, Christian Liberty Academy, Rick Santorum

Originally scheduled to speak in Niles Friday night at 7, Rick Santorum is now going to be speaking at The location for  at Christian Liberty Academy – which is located at 502 W. Euclid in Arlington Heights.

39% of Illinois Teachers Pay Nothing for Pensions

May 16, 2011 By: Cal Skinner Category: Alton, Argo, Arlington Heights, Aurora, Ball Chatham, Belleville, Belvidere School District, Berwyn, Bremen Township, Cahokia, Canton, Cary Elementary School District 26, Cary Grade School District, Champaign, Chicago Public Schools, Chicago Schools, Cicero, Collinsville, Crete-Monee, Crystal Lake Grade School District 47, Crystal Lake High School District 155, Danville, Decatur, DeKalb, District 155, District 165, District 2, District 200, District 26, District 3, District 300, District 47, Dixon, Dolton, Downers Grove, East Maine, Edwardsville, Effingham, Elgin School District, Elmhurst, Evanston, Freeport, Geneva, Genoa, Grayslake Unit School District 46, Harvard School District 50, Harvey, Highland Park, Homewood, Illinois Education Association, Illinois State Board of Education, Johnsburg School District, Joliet, Kaneland School District 302, Kankakee, Kevin McCarthy, Larry Snow, LaSalle, Lemont, Leyden Township, Lockport Township, Lombard, Lyons Township, Manteno, Marion, Massac, Mattoon, McHenry Grade School District 15, McHenry High School District 156, Moline, Naperville Unit District 203, New Lenox, Niles, Nippersink Elementary School District 2, North Boone, O'Fallon, Oak Lawn, Palatine, Park Ridge, Pension, Peoria, Peru, Plainfield, Proviso Township, Quincy, Reed Custer, Rochester, Rockford School District, Round Lake School District 116, Schaumburg, Schiller Park, School, Springfield, St. Charles School District, Summit Hill, Sycamore School District 427, Taylorville, Teacher Negotiations, Teacher Pay, Teacher Pension, Teacher Salaries, Teachers Retirement System, Teachers Union, Thornton Township, Tolono, Union, Urbana, Valley View, Warren Township High School District, Wauconda, Waukegan, West Chicago, Wheeling, Wilmington, Woodstock School District 200, Yorkville, Zion

Larry Snow

While Democrats say Teachers ‘Have Kept Their Part of the Deal?’

is the title of an April 5, 2011, article by former Huntley School District 158 Board member Larry Snow.  (The quote was in the Chicago Tribune Marcy 31, 2011.  It is from Executive Director Dick Ingram of Teachers’ Retirement System.)

The article was published in “The Champion” with this teaser:

“82,981 of 132,502 Illinois Teachers Pay Nothing or Little into Their Pensions

That’s 63% of all teachers in Illinois.

The State Journal-Register is reporting that State Rep. Kevin McCarthy (D-Orland Park) is promoting a bill where state and local governments would all pay six percent of payroll toward employee pensions.

In a revealing sentence in reporter Chris Wetterich’s article, he writes,

What’s unclear is how much more employees themselves would have to pay.

Because no one has done the research except, I believe, the Illinois Education Association and Snow, how much extra teachers would have to pay if their so-called contribution rate was raised from 9.4% to 13.77% is a really good question.

While not covering every school district in Illinois, Snow did research the teachers’ contracts for all of the large school districts (by law all are supposed to be on the internet) in order to find out how much teachers pay in order to get a “full 75 percent pension after working only 27 years.” He points out, “Most adults work for 27 years before they turn age 50.”

As way of background, Snow notes that teachers are not in the Social Security System and, therefore, are not forced to pay Social Security taxes.

“Ordinary workers get hit with a 6.2 percent deduction for Social Security,” Snow writes. “It’s a deduction they have to pay federal and state income taxes on.

“Democrats gave teachers a huge loophole of not paying income taxes on any of their pension deductions” he continues. “This enormous no-tax handout to teachers amounts to billions of dollars each year.”

Snow’s research leads him to this conclusion:

Over 51,000 of the total 132,502 teachers in Illinois contribute nothing from their K-12 paychecks into their pensions. Illinois law says it is to be 9.4 percent.

“About an additional 32,000 teachers pay little into their pensions. It is 1.81 percent to be precise for these 31,956 teachers.

How many teachers pay not a dime toward their retirement?

51,025 teachers in 186 school districts pay nothing for retirement benefits.

They “don’t pay a penny into the 9.4 percent called out by Illinois law.

“There are a total of 868 districts in Illinois.

“The pay-zero teachers listed are 39 percent of all teachers in Illinois,” Snow reveals.

No agency in state government seems to keep track of this information.

Not the Downstate Teachers Retirement Fund, which boldly and incorrectly claims,

“Active TRS members are required to contribute 9.4 percent of their creditable earnings each year…”

The State Board of Education doesn’t keep track either.

My guess is that only the Illinois Education Association has a matrix showing what school districts have given what benefits in contract negotiations.

Snow discovered this about Lockport:

“…on page 14 of the Lockport Township HS 205 teachers contract it reads:

  1. The Board will pay the current level of retirement contribution to the Teachers Retirement System of Illinois.”
  2. It is expressly understood that figures appearing on this salary schedule include a sum equal to the current level of TRS contribution of the base salary of each Teacher which is, in fact, payable to the Teachers’ Retirement System on the Teacher’s behalf.”

“The ISBE report shows this board paying nothing. A Democrat bureaucracy doesn’t check the teachers contracts to see if what is reported, matches what’s in writing.”

And, if legislation is passed requiring 4.37 percentage points more, how long do you think it will take Lockport taxpayers to pick up the difference?

Given that local teachers’ unions pretty much control school boards wherever they are elected (read everywhere but Chicago), my guess is will be on the top of the collective bargaining list.

Do you wonder if Rep. McCarthy knows that?

Is his proposal just a setting up local taxpayers for an even bigger fall?

Five years from now will 39% of teachers still be paying nothing for their pensions?

Even better for teachers is that this pension payment ups their pension payments.

Take a look at the chart below.  Chances are your school district is on it.

Chart of Pension Contributions by 82,981 District Teachers of 132,502 Total Illinois K-12 Teachers

Name of District

 

No. of Teachers Percent of Pension

Contributed by Teachers

Thornton Twp 205 428 Zero
Proviso 209 281 Zero
Waukegan 60 1,098 Zero
Morton 201 455 Zero
Kankakee 111 348 Zero
Joliet 204 340 Zero
Round Lake 116 387 Zero
Rockford 1,843 Zero
Decatur 61 454 Zero
Crete Monee 340 Zero
Danville 118 382 Zero
Valley View 365 1,068 Zero
Aurora West 129 706 Zero
East Peoria 309 69 Zero
Galesburg 281 Zero
Bremen 228 313 Zero
Freeport 317 Zero
Leyden 212 219 Zero
Elgin U-46 2,332 Zero
Rock Island 388 Zero
Mattoon 225 Zero
Collinsville 394 Zero
Massac 1 143 Zero
Sterling 219 Zero
Belvidere 531 Zero
Quincy 436 Zero
Dixon 179 Zero
West Chicago 248 Zero
Cook County 130 289 Zero
Cicero 99 738 Zero
Joliet 86 617 Zero
Harvey 152 163 Zero
Crystal Lake 155 412 Zero
Crystal Lake 47 564 Zero
Wheeling 21 489 Zero
Champaign 4 717 Zero
United CUSD 304 68 Zero
Riverdale 100 76 Zero
Reed Custer 255 114 Zero
Wilmington 209U 84 Zero
United Township 30 90 Zero
Summit Hill 161 213 Zero
Plainfield 1,695 Zero
Schiller Park 81 98 Zero
Dolton 149 176 Zero
Township 211 Palatine 799 Zero
Ball Chatham 5 248 Zero
Taylorville 3 152 Zero
Williamsville 15 81 Zero
Harrisburg 3 130 Zero
Belleville 201 281 Zero
Dupo 196 76 Zero
O’Fallon 203 145 Zero
O’Fallon 90 207 Zero
Rochester 3A 142 Zero
Pekin 108 248 Zero
Morton 709 175 Zero
New Lenox 122 287 Zero
Frankfort 157 158 Zero
Marion 2 219 Zero
Carterville 5 110 Zero
Kinnikinnick 131 122 Zero
Tolono 7 116 Zero
Mahomet-Seymour 3 161 Zero
Champaign 4 717 Zero
Urbana 346 Zero
Charleston 1 180 Zero
Park Ridge 64 319 Zero
Evanston 202 222 Zero
Maine HSD 207 508 Zero
Arlington Heights 214 753 Zero
Niles 219 350 Zero
Berkeley 87 165 Zero
Berwyn South 263 Zero
Lyons 204 239 Zero
Lemont 113 144 Zero
Palatine 15 713 Zero
Schaumburg 54 1,003 Zero
Oak Lawn 123 203 Zero
Oak Lawn 229 114 Zero
CHSD 230 Orland Park 519 Zero
Argo 217 111 Zero
Homewood 233 174 Zero
Genoa 424 137 Zero
Sycamore 427 231 Zero
Dekalb 428 362 Zero
Lombard 44 216 Zero
Downers Grove 58 277 Zero
Hinsdale 86 296 Zero
Elmhurst 205 538 Zero
Naperville 203 1,063 Zero
Effingham 40 176 Zero
Canton Union 66 175 Zero
Morris 54 61 Zero
Morris 101 50 Zero
Coal City 1 138 Zero
Jersey 100 164 Zero
Central CUSD 301 224 Zero
Kaneland 302 275 Zero
St. Charles 303 880 Zero
Cahokia 298 0.4
Chicago Public Schools 23,219 2
Peoria 150 988 0.4
Springfield 1,105 0.4
Moline 40 461 0.4
Harvard 149 0.87
Dolton 148 236 1.4
Belleville 118 228 0.4
Pekin 303 125 0.4
Hononegah 207 118 0.4
Arlington Heights 59 444 3
Leyden 212 219 0.4
Summit 104 103 0.4
Palos 118 130 0.4
CHSD 219 Orland Park 519 0.4
Bensenville 2 145 1.4
DuPage 88 266 0.4
CHSD 94 122 0.9
CUSD 300 1,189 4.4
Hawthorn 73 253 1.4
Lake Forest 115 132 0.4
Wauconda 118 273 0.4
Johnsburg 12 158 0.4
Cary 26 192 4.9
Woodstock 200 385 1.4
Keeneyville 20 107 0.4
Winnebago 323 117 0.4
LaSalle-Peru Twp. 120 88 0.7
Prairie-Hills 144 187 0.4
Geneva 304 367 Zero
Herscher 2 126 Zero
Manteno 5 160 Zero
Bourbonnais 53 160 Zero
Bradley 61 103 Zero
Bradley Bourbonnais 307 114 Zero
Momence 1 88 Zero
Yorkville 115 329 Zero
Plano 88 154 Zero
Oswego 308 827 Zero
Streator 44 132 Zero
Ottawa 141 140 Zero
Ottawa 140 102 Zero
Glenview 34 343 Zero
Zion 6 177 Zero
Grayslake 46 266 Zero
Elmwood Park 401 181 Zero
Libertyville 70 159 Zero
North Shore 112 374 Zero
HSD 113 Highland Park 249 Zero
Grant 124 91 Zero
Zion-Benton 126 156 Zero
Evanston 65 547 Zero
Grayslake 127 187 Zero
Meridian 15 64 Zero
Mt. Zion 3 133 Zero
Edwardsville 7 480 Zero
Alton 11 467 Zero
Macomb 185 130 Zero
McHenry 15 282 Zero
McHenry 156 158 Zero
Nippersink 2 92 Zero
Columbia 4 111 Zero
Waterloo 5 166 Zero
Hillsboro 3 114 Zero
Meridian 223 113 Zero
Illinois Valley Central 321 139 Zero
Carbondale 165 76 Zero
Carbondale 95 105 Zero
Riverton 14 85 Zero
Auburn 10 90 Zero
Pawnee 11 47 Zero
Panhandle 2 35 Zero
Sullivan 300 75 Zero
Centralia 135 93 Zero
Litchfield 12 83 Zero
Harlem 122 505 Zero
Granite City 9 617 Zero
Princeton 115 86 Zero
Princeton 500 43 Zero
Bond County 2 120 Zero
Duquoin CUSD 300 101 Zero
Rocton 140 102 Zero
Rochelle Twp. HSD 212 71 Zero
Rochelle CCSD 231 131 Zero
Byron 226 127 Zero
Oregon 220 104 Zero
Farmington Central 265 85 Zero
Porta 202 75 Zero
River Bend 2 71 Zero
Red Bud 132 73 Zero
Sparta 140 105 Zero
Southwestern 9 107 Zero
Staunton 6 87 Zero
Gillespie 7 81 Zero
Hamilton County 10 83 Zero
Midwest Central 191 85 Zero
Tuscola 301 86 Zero
West Carroll 314 99 Zero
Oakwood 76 64 Zero
Hoopeston 11 94 Zero
Westville 2 80 Zero
Beardstown 15 98 Zero
El Paso-Gridley 11 99 Zero
Murphysboro 186 137 Zero
Monticello 25 111 Zero
Paris-Union 95 74 Zero
Mt. Vernon Twp. 210 80 Zero
Mt. Vernon 80 109 Zero
Jasper County 1 101 Zero
Steger 194 128 Zero
Calumet City 155 77 Zero
North Boone 200 116 Zero
CCSD 93 Carol Stream 294 Zero
East Maine SD 63 254 Zero
Lockport Township HS 205 205 Zero
     
Above Teachers Total 82,981  

 

Message of the Day – Grief

April 14, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: Arlington Heights, Crystal Lake, Huntley Road, Memorial, Roadside Memorial, Vanessa Tobey, Waterford Cut

Vanessa Tobey Memorial on Huntley Road south of Waterford Cut in Crystal Lake the night of April 13, 2010.

As I was driving to Huntley for Grafton Township’s Annual Town Meeting, I noticed a memorial on Huntley Road south of Waterford Cut.

That’s apparently near where the place where the car crash that killed Vanessa Tobey took place.

I was a bit late, so I didn’t stop and turn around to take a picture.

On my way back to Crystal Lake a bit after ten o’clock, I saw a couple of cars and some young people standing around the memorial.

I stopped and asked if I could take a picture. A couple were shy, so I asked if I could just photograph their legs.

I asked if they were from Arlington Heights and they said they were.

Target Dumps Arlington Heights TIF

May 11, 2007 By: Cal Skinner Category: Arlington Heights, Coalition to Save International Plaza, International Plaza, Scott Bludorn, Tax Increment Financing District, TIF

As I was reading the Chicago Tribune on Tuesday, I noticed a story by Graydon Meganthat saying that Target and the Village of Arlington Heights are parting their ways.

Arlington Heights, you may remember decided to condemn the businesses in its International Plaza in order to attract Target.

Municipal officials can condemn property in a Tax Increment Financing district.

It’s called eminent domain and is being used in the Vulcan Lakes TIF project in Crystal Lake, even though Mayor Aaron Shepley said there would be no condemnation of property.

The Arlington Heights businessmen—mainly immigrants–went up for grabs.

Enter libertarian-minded activists angry at the condemnation of property for economic development.

They protested.

They leafleted door-to-door.

Candidates used the issue to make the incumbents look bad.

And, although the challengers did not succeed, the incumbents and Target threw in the towel.

“We just made it uncomfortable for Target,” Scott Bludorn, one of the citizens activists told McHenry County Blog.

“We certainly made the incumbents look shameful.”

= = = = =
Bludorn is seen in front of the map above.

Target Dumps Arlington Heights TIF

May 11, 2007 By: Cal Skinner Category: Arlington Heights, Coalition to Save International Plaza, International Plaza, Scott Bludorn, Tax Increment Financing District, TIF

As I was reading the Chicago Tribune on Tuesday, I noticed a story by Graydon Meganthat saying that Target and the Village of Arlington Heights are parting their ways.

Arlington Heights, you may remember decided to condemn the businesses in its International Plaza in order to attract Target.

Municipal officials can condemn property in a Tax Increment Financing district.

It’s called eminent domain and is being used in the Vulcan Lakes TIF project in Crystal Lake, even though Mayor Aaron Shepley said there would be no condemnation of property.

The Arlington Heights businessmen—mainly immigrants–went up for grabs.

Enter libertarian-minded activists angry at the condemnation of property for economic development.

They protested.

They leafleted door-to-door.

Candidates used the issue to make the incumbents look bad.

And, although the challengers did not succeed, the incumbents and Target threw in the towel.

“We just made it uncomfortable for Target,” Scott Bludorn, one of the citizens activists told McHenry County Blog.

“We certainly made the incumbents look shameful.”

= = = = =
Bludorn is seen in front of the map above.