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Archive for the ‘Pingree Road’

Lost White Maltese Poodle Sighted in Manor

January 31, 2012 By: Cal Skinner Category: Dog, Lost, Maltese Poodle, Pingree Road

Lost dog seen today on Pingree Road near the Crystal Lake Manor.

If you are in the Crystal Lake Manor, the owner of this little dog is looking for a miracle worker.

Here is her message:

Tully was sighted at the area of Pingree Rd and Drive in Lane in Crystal Lake Illinois.

Anyone in the area please keep a look out.

He loves hotdogs and carrots.

He will flatten to the ground if you can get close to him.

Please do not chase him if sighted, call me at 262-633-9371.

Mary

I am informed that there is now a $400 reward.

Train Suicide Victim Identified

May 28, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: Marlene Lantz, Marty A. DiFusco, Phil Pagano, Pingree Road, Pingree Road Metra Station, Suicide

A Metra train near Pingree Road.

McHenry County Coroner Marlene Lantz just revealed the name of the 51-year old man who killed himself by stepping in front of a Metra train yesterday near the Pingree Road Station.

He is Crystal Lake resident Marty A. DiFusco.

The copy cat suicide is part of Metra Executive Director Phil Pagano’s legacy, in my opinion.

= = = = =
An 11:29 AM update from the Crystal Lake Police Department:

“On Thursday, May 27, 2010, at approximately 12:56 PM, the Crystal Lake Police and the Crystal Lake Fire-Rescue Department responded to the area of Pingree Road, approximately 300 feet east of the train crossing, for a report of a pedestrian struck by a train.

“Upon arrival, emergency personnel discovered a male body, subsequently identified as Marty Difusco (51) of 1155 North Shore Drive, Crystal Lake, IL. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

“Train service was interrupted for approximately two hours while the scene was investigated. At this time there is no foul play suspected.

“This case remains under investigation by the Crystal Lake Police Department.”

Phil Pagano’s Legacy

May 28, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: Legacy, Metra, Phil Pagano, Pingree Road, Suicide, Train

Metra Executive Director Phil Pagano and local Metra Attorney Joe Gottemoller appear before the Crystal Lake City Council concerning the proposed Ridgefield commuter station.

A lot has been written by others of the legacy that Phil Pagano left Metra.

Having only ridden the Chicago and Northwestern line, I see less service since Metra took over, not more, except for the new Pingree Road Station.

The lessening of customer service pre-dated Pagano’s leadership, so I won’t blame him.

Other say that service on train lines other than the Northwestern (purchased by the Union Pacific) have improved. I’ll take their word for it. I’ve hear the Milwaukee Line was not so good.

Not much will be written about Pagano’s other legacy—showing people all over the country how to commit suicide.  (Yes, all over the country.  The 11 PM national CBS radio news led with his suicide and it made national TV.)

It is just too coincidental that yesterday’s Pingree Road suicide by train took place in Crystal Lake.

It strains credulity to think that the man who killed himself was not inspired by Pagano’s method of ending his life.

Union Pacific freight train speeding through Union, Illinois.

Everyone who is depressed does not have a handgun.

Everyone does have a nearby train.

If it appears I’m disturbed, I am.

Pagano did not have to make a public spectacle of his death.

Copy Cat Suicide Near Pingree Road Metra Station?

May 27, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: Crystal Lake, Crystal Lake Police, Metra, Metra Station, Phil Pagano, Pingree Road, Pingree Road Metra Station, Suicide

When I was picking up my son from Bernotas Junior High this afternoon a little after 2, I had to wait a long time to get through Woodstock Street.

Tree trimmers were out in force on Oak Street holding up traffic.

Metra train at the Pingree Road Station. Photo taken previously.

WBBM reported that the Metra train to Harvard was stopped at the Pingree Road Station, that passengers would be buses to stations as far away as Harvard and that the next train to Chicago would leave from Crystal Lake, rather than from Harvard.

No reason was given as to why.

I thought about driving over, but my son and I were on a mission—trimming the in-laws’ hedges in Wonder Lake.

Since then, the Crystal Lake Police Department has issued the following press release at 6:28 PM telling of what certainly sounds like a Phil Pagano copy cat suicide:

On Thursday, May 27, 2010, at approximately 12:56 PM, the Crystal Lake Police and the Crystal Lake Fire-Rescue Department responded to the area of Pingree Road, approximately 300 feet east of the train crossing, for a report of a pedestrian struck by a train.

Upon arrival, emergency personnel discovered the body of a male subject deceased at the scene. Train service was interrupted for approximately two hours while the scene was investigated. At this time there is no foul play suspected.

This case remains under investigation by the Crystal Lake Police Department. The subject has been identified however his identity is withheld pending notification of family members. Identity to be released at a later date.

Congressman Don Manzullo joined Metra Executive Director Phil Pagano and Metra Board member Jack Schaffer for the parking lot dedication the end of December.

The Pingree Road station is designed like European train stations.

Passengers can get from one side of the tracks to the other without crossing the tracks, as they must at most other Metra stations.

In the case of the Pingree Road Metra Station, there is a tunnel under the train tracks.

That makes the likelihood of this death’s being an accident remote, I believe.

Metra Ridgefield Station Chugs Along, But Planning and Zoning Commissioners Want Traffic Improvements, Too

March 18, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: Alan Skluzacek, Bridge to Nowhere, Chris DeRosia, Cornhusker Kickback, Country Club Road, Craig Steagall, Dave Goss, Don Batastini, East Woodstock Station, Flowerwood, Hillside Road, Jeff Greenman, Joe Gottemoller, Ken Koehler, Lake In the Hills, Lily Pond Road, McConnell Road, McHenry County, McHenry County College, Metra, Metra Station, Michelle Rentzsch, Patrick Engineering, Pingree Road, Pingree Road Metra Station, Rick Mack, Ridgefield, Ridgefield Metra Station, Ridgefield Road, Ridgefield Station, Ryan Westrom, Tartan Drive, Traffic Count, Union Pacific, Vincent Esposito

Metra's Rick Mack and local attorney Joe Gottemoller appear before the Crystal Lake Planning and Zoning Commission.

The Crystal Lake Planning and Zoning Commission gave preliminary approval to Metra’s proposed Ridgefield Train Station, but conditioned it on making multi-million dollar road improvements recommended by city engineering firm Patrick Engineering.

Patrick Engineering's Ryan Westrom and Chris DeRosia presented their traffic study.

The improvements, most overdue, according to Patrick engineers Ryan Westrom and Chris DeRosia, would include signals at Country Club and Hillside Road, plus Market and Ridgefield Road next to the Union Pacific railroad tracks. In addition, suggested improvements at McConnell Road and Country Club were requested. Finally, the motion asked that Metra make whatever improvements would be necessary for commuters to be able to get out of the parking lot on the 9,360 vehicle per day Country Club Road.

“If improvements are made, they will accommodate the traffic we projected,” Westrom told the commissioners.

Patrick Engineering predicts those using the Ridgefield Metra Station will live within the yellow outline.

The engineering firm, starting from scratch, projected that about 36% of the station’s commuters would come down Country Club Road from the north, 41% down Hillside Road and 22% from north of the site across the tracks through Downtown Ridgefield. Do the math and you see that 77% is predicted to come from the same side of the tracks where the 17.5 acre station will be located.

Click to enlarge and you may be able to see the road improvements that Patrick Engineering thinks are needed to move traffic in the area of the proposed Ridgefield Metra Commuter Station. While the bypass of Downtown Ridgefield was discussed, that option was not recommended by the Planning and Zoning Commissioners

Members expressed frustration that none of the roads were under city jurisdiction. The engineering report said current traffic volumes merited signals on both ends of Market Street in Downtown Ridgefield.  And, one at Tartan Drive and Ridgefield Road by 2015.

Consensus was expressed that commissioners wanted to protect Ridgefield residents and business owners, although none are located within Crystal Lake city limits.

Dave Goss and Don Bastastini confer during the meeting.

Motions to change the zoning from Estate Residential to Semi-Public and Public Use passed 5-0, as did a motion to approve how Metra proposed to meet the city’s Watershed Ordinance.

A motion from former City Councilman Dave Goss to approve a Preliminary Planned Unit Development, contingent on staff recommendations and road improvements suggested by Patrick Engineering passed 3-2.

Metra’s presentation suggested that property values around train stations generally increased with the prediction being that farmland north of the station site on Country Club Road would “have development pressure…(with) higher density development, higher land values.”

Goss voted against his own motion, based on his belief that the commuter station would lower property values in Ridgefield. He was joined by Commission Chairman Jeff Greenman.

Commissioners Don Batastini, Vince Esposito, Alan Skluzacek voted in the affirmative, although Esposito had said earlier, “I don’t think a train station that size needs to be out there.”

When the issue reaches city council on April 6th, a three-fifths approval vote will be needed, according to Metra’s local attorney Joe Gottemoller.

Earlier, Gottemoller had argued that the new traffic generated by Metra “is very small.” He noted that none of the improvements recommended by the traffic consulting firm, for example improving Market Street, were on McHenry County’s Five-Year Plan.

During the public comment period Chris Conway from Hillside road worried about increased garbage on the road and its taking more than the ten minutes it now takes her to get out of her driveway.

“We kind of feel there’s some insider trading going on on this property,” speaking for herself and neighbors.

The property is half owned by McHenry County Board Chairman Ken Koehler.

Also speaking was Craig Steagall, land owner across the tracks from Koehler’s land.

Craig Steagall asks questions while Metra's Rick Mack (on the right) and attorney Joe Gottemoller look on.

He questioned the traffic experts traffic projections. Earlier he had hired his own traffic consultant and presented results to the city council.

“How did 84 Lumber get in there without making those improvements?” he asked.

Steagall also asked how the decades-old agriculture zoning for the former Flowerwood nursery property got changed to industrial through “a zoning map correction.” (Later Planning and Economic Development Director Michelle Rentzsch confirmed that what Stegall said was correct.)

“There’s been an allegation I’m on my high horse because of a sour land deal,” he continued, telling of how Metra approached him to buy 12 acres and how Alexandra Lumber was considering purchasing 20 acres prior to purchasing 84 Lumber’s abandoned yard. Steagall then pointed out that under the discussions he had had with Metra to buy land south of the tracks, he and his partner would have had to put in $500,000 to a million for infrastructure improvements, a cost burden he considered unreasonable.

Steagall compared Metra’s planned station to

  • “Health Care—Start over,”
  • “the Bridge to Nowhere” and
  • “the Cornhusker Kickback.”

Speaking also of the Lily Pond Road station, which will be built on donated land, Stegall concluded,

“It’s Metra stations for all our friends.”

Another man asked if people, especially McHenry County College students and employees would have walking and biking access.

“Would it be good service to the college.”

No one from McHenry College offered public comment.

“What prevented Metra from putting the station on the south side of the tracks,” another person asked.

In rebuttal, a factoid came out that was interesting.

Over 60% of the people using the Pingree Road Station are from Lake in the Hills.

Replying to Steagall, Gottemoller said, “Sour grapes. That’s a political item that we don’t have anything to do with.”

Metra's Rick Mack addresses commissioners while attorney Joe Gottemoller observes.

Rick Mack, representing Metra, explained that 15 trains would come down the track each morning and that the Lily Pond Road Station (called East Woodstock) was put on the south side of the tracks so most cars using it wouldn’t have to cross the tracks.

He explained that capacity throughout McHenry County was being expanded, pointing to all the empty land between Woodstock and Harvard.

“This is an entire upgrade, not just to address today,” Mack continued. Earlier, it had been pointed out that train storage would be moved from Crystal Lake to north of Woodstock, that there was no room to store additional trains in Crystal Lake.

“All of these improvements are interconnected.”

Traffic concerns were widespread among the commissioners.

Greenman said,

Jeff Greenman

“We’re going to trust the county to do what it needs to do and trust the state to do what it needs to do.

“There are so many interdependencies, so many ‘what if’s’

“It’s a huge risk.”

At the end of the meeting, Goss thanked the city council “for standing up for the traffic study.”

Metra had asked to use its own traffic consultant, but that was rejected by the council in favor of one on the city’s approved list.

Manzullo, Shepley, Schaffer and Pagano Attend Pingree Road Metra Parking Lot Opening; Completion of Pingree Road Improvement Also Celebrated

December 28, 2009 By: Cal Skinner Category: 16th Congressional District, Aaron Shepley, Don Manzullo, Jack Schaffer, Metra, Metra Station, Parking, Parking Lot, Phil Pagano, Pingree Road, Pingree Road Metra Station

The following press released was received from the office of 16th District Congressman Don Manzullo (R-Egan):

Rep. Manzullo:

Transportation Improvements Great News for Motorists, Commuters in CL

Crystal Lake Mayor Aaron Shepley talks with 16th District U.S. Representative Don Manzullo at the Pingree train station.

[CRYSTAL LAKE] Congressman Don Manzullo (R-Egan) joined several local officials in Crystal Lake this morning to celebrate the opening of two transportation improvements that will benefit area motorists and Metra commuters.

At an early morning news conference at the Pingree Road Metra station, the officials dedicated the opening of the station’s expanded parking lot as well as the nearby improvement to the busy intersection of Crystal Lake Avenue and Pingree Road.

Manzullo secured $1 million in federal funds to help fund the widening, realignment and new traffic signals erected at the busy intersection that was previously regulated by a 4-way stop sign. The project — shared by the City of Crystal Lake, Metra, Algonquin Township, and Nunda Township – was completed last month.

Congressman Don Manzullo talks with Metra Executive Director Phil Pagano and McHenry County Metra Board Member Jack Schaffer in the Pingree Road Station.

“The two improvements we celebrated today will help improve traffic flow through Crystal Lake while making the Pingree Road Metra station more accessible,” Manzullo said. “Traffic congestion continues to be McHenry County’s number one challenge, and I will continue to seek McHenry County’s fair share of federal transportation dollars to help alleviate the back-ups.”

In addition to the intersection project, Manzullo has secured significant federal funding for the Western Bypass of Algonquin ($19 million), the Rakow Road widening project through Crystal Lake and Lake in the Hills ($7 million), and the Route 47 widening project through Huntley ($6.7 million). Construction on all three of those projects is scheduled to begin within the next year or two.

Zoning Failure

August 08, 2009 By: Cal Skinner Category: Adaptive Re-Use, Crystal Lake, HIghest and Best Use., Pingree Road, Tek Drive, Vulcan Lakes

Crystal Lake has an unnatural asset called Vulcan Lake, an old gravel pit.

The big one is larger than Crystal Lake…by a lot.

Everyone knows that waterfront views add value to real estate.

Just ask those living on Crystal Lake.

The hot neighborhood rumor a couple of years ago was that the last lot had been purchased for $450,000.

Instead of approving a highrise where those living on the upper floors could see Vulcan Lakes over the evergreens, the old outdoor movie theater site ended up as townhouses that could have gone pretty much anywhere.

While it’s also across Pingree Road from Vulcan Lakes, there is a lot of land south of Three Oaks Roads which was zoned for industrial buildings. I guess that was in the 1980′s.

Why city planners did not find a way to maximize the value of the land fronting on Pingree is beyond me. Industrial buildings are not the highest and best use of this land.

For more than a year, I’ve noticed an empty factory building at the intersection of Pingree and Tek Drive. It’s on the northeast corner.

I picture a restaurant overlooking Vulcan Lake on a second or third floor location.

Is that too imaginative an adaptive re-use?

Community Investment Award in Crystal Lake to Good Shepherd Hospital for Intermediate Care Center across from Pingree Road Metra Station

March 23, 2009 By: Cal Skinner Category: Advocate Health Care, ER Docs, Good Shepherd Hospital, Joe Giangrasso, Kathy Lapacek, Liz Horvath, Pingree Road

Because my brother-in-law Dr. Joe Giangrasso (seen above with Dr. Liz Horvath) heads up the Emergency Room operation at Good Shepherd Hospital, I got advance notice last summer of his department’s new facility in Crystal Lake across from Metra’s Pingree Road Station.

It features Board Certified Emergency Care physicians on duty from 8 AM to 8 PM seven days a week. I figure there’s no need to drive out of town for most minor emergencies. And, no need to pay emergency room prices for an ER doctor’s care.

The following press release popped into my in box Friday. At the bottom is a fact I was not aware of–

more than half of Good Shepherd Hospital’s patients are from McHenry County.

City of Crystal Lake
Honors
Advocate Good Shepherd

The Economic Development Committee of the City of Crystal Lake is honoring Advocate Good Shepherd Hospital for the three-story facility it opened in the community last September.

The committee announced Friday that it would present its 2008 Community Investment Award to Good Shepherd administrators at 4:30 pm, Wednesday, March 25th in the lobby of their new 72,000-square foot building at 525 Congress Parkway, Crystal Lake.

The Outpatient & Immediate Care Center is also home to comprehensive imaging services, its own clinical lab, and primary care and specialty physicians.

Kathy Lapacek, vice president of business development at Good Shepherd said,

“This is a great honor for Advocate, and I think it reaffirms how seriously we take our commitment to meeting the healthcare needs of the Crystal Lake community.”

She elaborated,

“Certainly the building itself is beautiful and represents a significant investment, but we’re also very proud of our partnership with the talented doctors that provide care for area residents at our immediate care center.”

The center is the only one of its kind in McHenry County to be staffed 100 percent by board-certified emergency medicine physicians (ER doctors.)

About Advocate Good Shepherd Hospital:

Advocate Good Shepherd Hospital in Barrington, Illinois is an acute care medical facility with almost 700 physicians representing 50 medical specialties. For 30 years, Good Shepherd has served its communities by providing quality, compassionate care. It is part of Advocate Health Care, one of the top ten health care systems in the country and the largest health care delivery system in Illinois, which provided $344 million in community benefit and charity care in 2007.

Slightly more than half of all Good Shepherd patients are McHenry County residents. It is a leader in delivering some of the most advanced technologies and techniques to the northwest suburbs. Its comprehensive cardiac care center was named #1 in the State of Illinois for overall cardiac care and cardiology by HealthGrades, the nation’s leading hospital quality ratings organization.

Here’s more about Advocate Good Shepherd Hospital

= = = = =
Radiologic Techologist Mike Heft proudly showed me the Magnetic Resonance Imaging machine above.

John Coonen Tightens Thinking on Vulcan Lakes

March 25, 2008 By: Cal Skinner Category: 75% Sales Tax Hike, Crystal Lake, John Coonen, Pingree Road, Vulcan Lakes

This past weekend, Crystal Laker John Coonen unleashed his brain on the Vulcan Lakes development via the 75% Crystal Lake sales tax hike. (No, he didn’t use the “75% sales tax hike” phrase; that’s mine.)

Since then, he has “tightened up” his thinking on the subject.

So, if you are one of the several hundred or so who drop out on the weekend (aren’t you supposed to be working?), here is the revised version:

Even in great financial times, the recent massive sales tax increase approved by Crystal Lake’s city council would be bad for businesses and consumers in Crystal Lake.

Now that we’re clearly entering a recession, it is beyond counterintuitive that the City would add insult to injury, burdening its citizens and businesses with a tax increase.

It’s a brain-dead, lazy business decision.

*The right solution is simple: Sell the “Vulcan Lakes” property.*

I said “simple,” not easy.

Sell it now, and convert the property from a fiscal drain into a financial windfall for the city and its bosses (the taxpayers – remember them?).

Promote growth, don’t penalize those of us who shop in Crystal Lake.

We must rely on the free market to rise the economic tide, not the government.

*But will anyone buy a lake?

*Hey, let’s face it, it’s not a lake; it’s an old gravel pit.

If it is unsellable in its current state, I say (after running the mother of all fishing tournaments) fill in the old gravel pit (perhaps with dredged silt from Crystal Lake, killing two birds with one stone?).


Fill it in, then sell it, zoning it as retail. Imagine access from Rt. 14, Pingree, Rackow and Virgina Roads – a massive, profitable retail development, in one of the country’s most affluent counties.

Imagine the windfall in property taxes, sales taxes and employment.

Just a few other benefits to filling in the Vulcan Gravel Pit:

  • Eliminate all erosion to the shoreline, now putting Pingree Road at severe risk
  • Reduce water evaporation, retaining vital groundwater for local drinking water supply
  • Reduce the risk of changing the water table on Crystal Lake (our namesake lake)
  • Reduce a massive financial and safety liability from public’s balance sheet (this is a DANGEROUS gravel pit, folks)
  • Make the property 100% taxable, putting the land back into the private sector

Crystal Lake could indeed afford many needed improvements, even after repealing the sales tax increase.

WISE UP CRYSTAL LAKE!

Sell Vulcan Gravel Pit!

= = = = =
The view is of Vulcan Lakes is from the Pingree Road side. I guess I was standing on the collapsing gravel pit wall.

John Coonen Tightens Thinking on Vulcan Lakes

March 25, 2008 By: Cal Skinner Category: 75% Sales Tax Hike, Crystal Lake, John Coonen, Pingree Road, Vulcan Lakes

This past weekend, Crystal Laker John Coonen unleashed his brain on the Vulcan Lakes development via the 75% Crystal Lake sales tax hike. (No, he didn’t use the “75% sales tax hike” phrase; that’s mine.)

Since then, he has “tightened up” his thinking on the subject.

So, if you are one of the several hundred or so who drop out on the weekend (aren’t you supposed to be working?), here is the revised version:

Even in great financial times, the recent massive sales tax increase approved by Crystal Lake’s city council would be bad for businesses and consumers in Crystal Lake.

Now that we’re clearly entering a recession, it is beyond counterintuitive that the City would add insult to injury, burdening its citizens and businesses with a tax increase.

It’s a brain-dead, lazy business decision.

*The right solution is simple: Sell the “Vulcan Lakes” property.*

I said “simple,” not easy.

Sell it now, and convert the property from a fiscal drain into a financial windfall for the city and its bosses (the taxpayers – remember them?).

Promote growth, don’t penalize those of us who shop in Crystal Lake.

We must rely on the free market to rise the economic tide, not the government.

*But will anyone buy a lake?

*Hey, let’s face it, it’s not a lake; it’s an old gravel pit.

If it is unsellable in its current state, I say (after running the mother of all fishing tournaments) fill in the old gravel pit (perhaps with dredged silt from Crystal Lake, killing two birds with one stone?).


Fill it in, then sell it, zoning it as retail. Imagine access from Rt. 14, Pingree, Rackow and Virgina Roads – a massive, profitable retail development, in one of the country’s most affluent counties.

Imagine the windfall in property taxes, sales taxes and employment.

Just a few other benefits to filling in the Vulcan Gravel Pit:

  • Eliminate all erosion to the shoreline, now putting Pingree Road at severe risk
  • Reduce water evaporation, retaining vital groundwater for local drinking water supply
  • Reduce the risk of changing the water table on Crystal Lake (our namesake lake)
  • Reduce a massive financial and safety liability from public’s balance sheet (this is a DANGEROUS gravel pit, folks)
  • Make the property 100% taxable, putting the land back into the private sector

Crystal Lake could indeed afford many needed improvements, even after repealing the sales tax increase.

WISE UP CRYSTAL LAKE!

Sell Vulcan Gravel Pit!

= = = = =
The view is of Vulcan Lakes is from the Pingree Road side. I guess I was standing on the collapsing gravel pit wall.