Archive for About Kenilworth
North Shore joins South Side, raises money, makes friends
Cocktail parties are very enjoyable and sociable. Anything can happen. But at a recent cocktail party in Kenilworth, philanthropy began and a partnership sparked. Denise and Doug Nash held the party at their Kenilworth home to meet Paul Adams III who is launching a new charter school in Englewood on the city’s South Side. Adams is a well-known educator throughout Chicago and vicinity. Adams hit the jackpot so to say with his Providence Englewood Charter School, and before he realized what was happening, families from Kenilworth were lining up and pledging at least $25,000 each (more than the median annual income in Englewood). Not exactly your typical cocktail party. Not only did these amazing contributionists donate money, but donated time as well. Many Kenilworth families have offered to be tutors and volunteers. The story just keeps getting better. A neighborhood Boy Scout troop helped assemble desks and chairs for the school. Kenilworth resident and donor Art Duquette bought bottled water for the students when the drinking water at the school was unusable. On Labor Day weekend, instead of spending it like sloths, families headed to the school, equipment in hand and held a cleaning marathon to make sure the school could open on time. This is the first in the Chicago school reform movement that involves suburban-city partnership, and it is already inspiring other suburbs to help out with other Chicago public schools. Winnetka has become a philanthropic copycat as well as residents of Barrington, Hinsdale and Lake Forest. They have all made inquiries about similar partnerships, and Winnetka has a project underway.
Technorati Tags: Kenilworth, Englewood, Chicago public school reform, Winnetka, Barrington, Hinsdale, Lake Forest, Paul Adams III
Kenilworth school district asks for upgrades
The Kenilworth School District has announced its intentions to ask for funding to upgrade things at Joseph Sears School in 2007. Kenilworth School District 38 will ask for $8.2 million in building upgrades for the school and an increase in Education Funds from taxpayers in April. This means that because of these requests, if it passes, individual tax payers will see an increase between $750 and $775 in the near future. By asking for this money, the school district plans to improve life-safety items in schools and fix issues right now that are out of date with the state code or pose a risk to students and staff. The School Board of Education is in agreement with these improvements, so it is likely that we’ll see the tax increase take place.
Technorati Tags: Kenilworth, Joseph Sears School, School District 38, Board of Education






