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Currently training for the Chicago Marathon in October 2015. Enjoy my running diary. Sidenote:I was the first mayor in the United states to write an everyday blog, although I am no longer a mayor this is that blog.
For further information or to pre-register please contact either Michael Filipowicz or Erin Wilhelm at (847) 546-9336 or visit our website www.firstgiving.com/gavin37 .
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This ACE operation was conducted as part of a larger county-wide initiative and a cooperative press release is being drafted by the Waukegan Police Department. Thank you for your support of our continued efforts to eliminate the sale of alcohol to minors and the responsible sale of alcohol to adults. Of course, we will continue to conduct ACE operations and are planning one for prom time.
The most frightening words in the English language are - I am from the government and I am here to help!I have a variety of things to say about the Illinois Hospital Facility Planning Board's (IHFPB) decision to not build a hospital in either Lindenhurst or Round Lake. So I am going to put them in no particular order.
NOTE: This was the post I was going to write today, but late yesterday, the Illinois Hospital Facility Board denied both Vista and Advocate the ability to build a hospital in Western Lake county. Advocate management is still committed to the process and the freestanding facility they are proposing will be before the Planning and Zoning Commission at the end of the month. I will write more about this shortly. But I can't tell you how disappointed I am by how poorly the State manages this process. Here is a link to the Daily Herald article in todays paper.
This article was in Mondays Daily Herald and I think it goes to show you how nuts the process is for attracting a hospital. The Illinois Hospital Facility board uses Mapquest to determine traffic times and clearly has never driven the 45-60 minutes to the nearest hospital.
If you live in Lindenhurst or Round Lake, how far is it to the nearest hospital?
If you believe the state's findings, there's a hospital a mere 16 minutes from Round Lake and another just 19 minutes from Lindenhurst.
Lake County Board Chairwoman Suzi Schmidt said the findings are outrageous, especially given traffic congestion on Lake County roads.
The Illinois Health Facilities Planning Board examined travel times as part of its study of two hospital proposals -- Vista Medical Center's in Lindenhurst and Advocate Health Care's in Round Lake. They admit their method of measurement isn't perfect, but they still use it to help decide if a new health-care facility is needed.
State officials use MapQuest, a Web site that provides driving directions and maps, to determine the distance between facilities and travel time. In the case of the two Lake County proposals on the table, the data shows neither is needed.
"This has been a very difficult thing for a long time," said Jeffrey Mark, executive secretary for the planning board. "The board has used this system for many, many years, but the problem is, travel times is never clearly defined."
The Daily Herald conducted an unscientific study to determine drive-times to the three closest hospitals to Lindenhurst and Round Lake. Daily Herald staffers followed the same MapQuest routes cited by the state, in nonrush hour and rush hour traffic.
Only once did our findings match the state's; the rest of the trips were longer.
On Tuesday and Wednesday, the health facilities planning board will vote on the Lindenhurst and Round Lake hospital proposals.
It will take into account several factors, including travel times to other hospitals and a current excess of 209 hospital beds in the area. The meeting is in Springfield.
Mark said 30 minutes is a benchmark the state sees as a reasonable time to drive for an elective hospital procedure.
Vista wants to build a 140-bed hospital near Deep Lake Road and Route 132. According to the state, Condell Medical Center in Libertyville is 19 minutes from that location; Vista Medical Center East in Waukegan is 20 minutes away; and Lake Forest Hospital is 22 minutes away.
Advocate wants to build a 144-bed hospital at Route 120 and Wilson Road. The three closest hospitals to that site, according to the state, are Northern Illinois Medical Center in McHenry at 16 minutes; Advocate Good Shepherd Hospital near Lake Barrington at 16 minutes; and Condell at 19 minutes.
In our survey, all the drive times but one -- a nonrush hour trip from Round Lake to Northern Illinois Medical Center in McHenry -- were three to 22 minutes longer than the MapQuest estimate.
The longest trip was from Lindenhurst to Lake Forest Hospital in nonrush hour traffic. At 44 minutes, it was double the state's 22-minute estimate. The delay was due to ongoing construction on Interstate 94.
Mark said because of issues such as construction and traffic congestion, the board plans to factor in extra time to the MapQuest estimations.
The board decided last month to multiply travel times by 1.25 within the city of Chicago and 1.15 in the suburbs and selected cities such as Rockford, Peoria and Springfield, Mark said.
"We acknowledge this is an issue and travel times vary by day of the week, time of the year and construction," Mark said. "We've tried to address it. And we would also like to be relatively fair."
The change was not made in time for the state reports on the Vista and Advocate proposals.
That means the 22-minute trip from Lindenhurst to Lake Forest Hospital would be increased to just more than 25 minutes under the new guidelines.
That's still almost 19 minutes less than what the Daily Herald trip.
The state's studies were done from the communities where the hospitals would be built. The distance to existing hospitals from neighboring towns farther away, such as Fox Lake and Antioch, were not taken into account.
Since the conception of album art by Alex Steinweiss in 1939, it has become an integral part of music and popular culture. See the cover evolve from early jazz sleeves to iconic rock albums to interactive CD booklets. The exhibit contains sections on rock, punk, jazz, funk, hip hop, pop, novelty and children's records. It also features highlights from the remarkable catalogues of The Rolling Stones, The Beatles and Pink Floyd. A special area focuses on album covers by famous visual artists such as Andy Warhol, Salvador Dali, Takashi Murakami and Robert Mapplethorpe. The exhibit also includes the history of the various audio formats and packaging used to distribute music over the years, including Edison phonographic cylinders, records, 8-tracks, cassette tapes, Compact Discs (CDs) and MP3 files.
The exhibition features numerous hands-on activities for children and adults. In the Cover Art Studio kids can design their own album cover or interpret a classic such as Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon." At the Cover Shoot visitors can take the stage with various costumes and props and get in touch with their inner rock star. Adults can get in on the fun as they try to recall band logos in our Album Art Alphabet game. A free audio tour provides a soundtrack for visitors as they explore the exhibit.
The entrance to the Lake County Discovery Museum is located on Route 176, just west of Fairfield Road and east of Wauconda in Lakewood Forest Preserve. Gallery hours are Monday - Saturday from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Sunday from 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Admission is $6 for adults and $2.50 for youth ages four to 17. Children three years and under are free. Seniors are $2.50 after 2 p.m. On Discount Tuesdays, admission is $3 for adults, and youth 17 years and under are free. Admission is always free for Museum members.
"LP Art" is sponsored by the Daily Herald. For more information about the exhibit or to download discount admission coupons, call 847-968-3400 or visit online at www.LCFPD.org/LPart.
About the Lake County Discovery Museum
The Lake County Discovery Museum in Wauconda, Illinois, provides visitors with hands-on exhibits and educational programs. The nationally accredited Museum also is home to the nation's largest collection of picture postcards. The Museum is part of the Lake County Forest Preserve District, which manages more than 26,000 acres of land and offers innovative educational, recreational and cultural opportunities for all ages.