Saturday, Aug. 10 |
LDC employees get layoff notices
[AUG.
10, 2002]
Layoff notices have gone out to the 435 American
Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees who work at
Lincoln Developmental Center, according to Dan Senters, spokesman
for AFSCME Local 425.
|
Union members will begin meetings
Monday to determine if they have options for employment in other
state-operated facilities for the developmentally disabled. Some LDC employees may become eligible for early retirement under the new
plan passed by the state legislature recently.
On Aug. 26 and 27, representatives will
be available to talk to LDC employees about unemployment
compensation, Social Security benefits and other retirement
possibilities. A job fair will be held on the LDC campus Aug. 29.
Peer counselors will be available, sponsored by the AFL-CIO, Senters
said.
The Department of Human Services must
give union members 30 days notice of layoffs, Senters said. DHS is
preparing to shutter the 125-year-old facility if the Illinois
Health Facilities Planning Board decides to issue a permit for its
closure on Aug. 15.
A report issued early this week by the
Department of Public Health, which provides staff for the planning
board, recommends the state close LDC. Although the planning board
does not always follow DPH’s recommendation, it was another blow for
those who support keeping the facility open.
[to top of second column in this
article]
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Gov. George Ryan and DHS, citing
continued allegations of abuse and neglect, announced in June that
LDC would be closed and its residents either placed in community
settings or sent to other state-operated facilities. Closing date
was set for Aug. 31.
At present only 163 residents remain at
LDC; the rest of the 375 residents living there since last October
have been moved to other facilities.
Senters said that a group of parents
and AFSCME members plan to attend the meeting of the Health
Facilities Planning Board to be held in Chicago next Wednesday, even
though the board will not take any further testimony at that
meeting. He said even though no one would be able to speak for
keeping LDC open, the silent presence of a large group of supporters
would show their solidarity.
[Joan
Crabb]
|
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IOCC ‘race’ coming
through Lincoln
[AUG.
10, 2002]
BALTIMORE — The "Race to
Respond," a cross-country cycling tour in support of International
Orthodox Christian Charities, is coming through Illinois this month.
The cyclists and their support crew are expected to pass through
Lincoln on Aug. 11.
|
Five amateur cyclists from the United
States and Europe participate in the benefit ride, which is to raise
awareness and funds for IOCC, the official humanitarian aid agency
of Eastern Orthodox Christians. Team members will be available for
interviews, even as they maintain an average pace of 130 miles a
day.
The 25-day race began Aug. 3 in
Keyport, N.J., and is scheduled to conclude on Aug. 28 near San
Francisco.
In between the two coasts, the riders
will cross 11 states — an estimated 3,500 miles — and reach
elevations of 12,200 feet. Starting in New Jersey, the race route
covers the hills of Pennsylvania, the Great Lakes states of Ohio,
Indiana and Illinois, the plains of Missouri and Kansas, the Rocky
Mountains of Colorado and Utah, the desert regions of Nevada and,
finally, northern California.
Along the route, the race team will
give presentations about IOCC at Orthodox Christian parishes and
other stopping points. IOCC expects to raise $250,000 through the
race and its associated events.
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
IOCC is celebrating its 10th
anniversary as the premier humanitarian aid agency of Orthodox
Christians, who number 4.5 million in the United States. Since 1992,
IOCC has done more than $140 million in relief and development work
in 21 countries, including the West Bank, Bosnia-Herzegovina,
Ethiopia and the Russian Federation.
The cross-country bicycle tour is
intended to show how IOCC works to connect communities around the
globe. Every day, IOCC is in its own "race" to respond to the needs
of people suffering from war, poverty and natural disaster.
To learn
more about IOCC or the Race to Respond, see
www.racetorespond.org.
[News release]
|
|
Thompson craft awards presented
to four Illinois artisans
[AUG.
10, 2002]
SPRINGFIELD — On Thursday,
first lady Lura Lynn Ryan presented the sixth annual James R.
Thompson Awards for Excellence in Craft to four Illinois artisans
who specialize in weaving, sculpture, jewelry-making and pasanky, a
centuries-old Ukranian craft.
|
"As first lady, it is an honor to help
increase interest in the broad talents of our Illinois artisans,"
Mrs. Ryan said. "Today’s award recipients were chosen by their peers
as the best of a tremendous group of individuals who bring great
passion, creativity and care to their work."
Susan kavicky [last name spelled all
lowercase] of Island Grove received
first prize for her work in fiber. She took her first basketry class
in 1987, looking for a portable craft she could take along while her
husband was fishing. She became hooked when she learned to harvest,
pound, split, size and weave with brown ash. In her work, brown ash
basketry is taken to a new form when the traditional wood splint is
showcased. Whether the structure is organic or architectural, the
satin of brown ash is always the center of attention.
Merit awards were presented to artisans
Joyce P. Lopez, Michele Friedman and Vera Samycia.
Ms. Lopez’s sculptures are a rich
combination of chromed steel wrapped in French cotton thread. Her
work emphasizes a graphic approach with clean design and an unusual
combination of materials.
Vera Samycia learned the centuries-old
Ukrainian tradition of pasanky from her mother. Her decorated eggs
combine her unique style with the rituals, symbols and tradition of
pasanky.
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
Michele Friedman’s jewelry is
influenced by architectural styles of the late 19th century and the
20th century. She conveys her passion for innovative design and
architecture through her work with multiple geometric shapes
constructed in a variety of materials.
The work of the winners will be
featured in September at the Illinois Artisans Shop in Chicago’s
James R. Thompson Center. Their work also will be exhibited at The
Museum Store at the Illinois State Museum in Springfield, the
Southern Illinois Artisans Shop in Rend Lake and at the Dickson
Mounds Museum Gift Shop in Lewiston.
The
Illinois Artisans Program generates statewide and national
recognition for the cultural heritage of the craft arts in Illinois.
[Illinois
Government News Network
press release]
|
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