From 24 hours to 20 seconds: Electronic signs make businesses flexible

Accepting the recommendation of Skokie’s Economic Development Commission, the board approved allowing business owners to change electronic sign messages every 20 seconds rather than 24 hours as stipulated under the current code.

“Currently, Skokie businesses do not regularly take advantage of electronic sign technology,” said Economic Development Commission Chairman Shalom Klein.

The Economic Development Commission held a public hearing a year ago and studied the issue for even longer, working alongside village staff. The commission unanimously agreed to recommend significant changes.

“We believe this proactive change will allow the business community to take advantage of technology that’s increasingly becoming more affordable or help attract commerce in this fantastic village,” Klein said.

Read more at: http://www.chicagotribune.com/suburbs/skokie/news/ct-skr-electronic-signs-tl-0917-20150914-story.htmlFullSizeRender (15)

Open House & Networking at Mr. Floor this Thursday

Open House & Networking at Mr. Floor

Join us on July 9th in Skokie for a FREE event!

Come and network with local business professionals at Mr. Floor in Skokie, IL 

Kosher refreshments will be served

Where: 3828 Oakton Street Skokie, IL

When: July 9 6:00 – 8:00 PM

Register at: http://www.jewishb2bnetworking.com/business-event/open-house-networking-mr-floor

Skokie Review: Parade countdown: Skokie putting final pieces in place for Fourth of July celebration

ct-ct-skr-fourth-parade-tl-0625-3
Chairman Alan Gerstner leads his committee through a planning meeting earlier this month to prepare for the Fourth of July Parade in Skokie. Gerstner is the new chairman of the Fourth of July Parade Committee. (Mike Isaacs, Pioneer Press)

Soon, the street outside Village Hall— where Skokie’s Fourth of July Parade planning committee met earlier this month — will be loaded with patriotic music, vibrant colors, floats and many other festivities.

The parade kicks off at noon July 4, from Oakton Community College, 7701 N. Lincoln Ave. It will travel down Lincoln Avenue to Niles Center Road and head east on Oakton where it will end at Oakton Park.

But in order to make that celebratory sensory overload happen, there had to be less exciting meetings just like this one, and there had to be dedicated volunteers willing to put in time and effort to take care of both the big and small details just like these folks. 

“We started from scratch this year,” new Fourth of July Parade Committee Chairman Alan Gerstner told a couple dozen of his troops. “You guys have helped me and helped the community, and I wanted to thank you for all your hard work.”

Gerstner and village officials said they wanted to take the parade in a new direction, and they promise that this is the beginning of a new era. The most noticeable addition to this year’s parade is Skokie’s first celebrity grand marshal (Skokie had a local grand marshal from the military years ago).

On the day of the planning meeting, Stolte had emailed the committee saying that his family is excited about the role they’ll assume on the Fourth of July.

A somewhat bumpy changing of the guard in overseeing the parade was announced early in the year, when the weather was a lot colder and the Fourth of July felt far away.

After more than 25 years as parade chairperson, Fern Katz stepped down and Gerstner, a member of the parade committee under Katz for years, was handed the chairmanship.

Katz had complained that she was disrespected and poorly treated by the village, leaving her no choice but to resign.

Corporation Counsel Michael Lorge told the Skokie Review in January that some people who had been part of the parade committee requested that changes be made. Katz had talked about resigning, he said, and “we took her up on her offer.”

Gerstner has also served as president of the Skokie School District 68 School Board, chairman of the Skokie Human Relations Commission and is currently a member of the Skokie Caucus Party Board and vice chairman of the Skokie Zoning Board of Appeals.

When the planning committee meeting was held earlier this June, volunteers had nailed down 63 units for the parade, but that number has increased since then and approaches 70, volunteers said. Gerstner said he initially thought 35 or 40 units would be a good number for the first year.

The committee has reached out to new sponsors as well, making contact with businesses that have not been involved in the parade in past years, Gerstner said.

The list of sponsors for the Fourth of July Parade include the old and the new: the village and the Skokie Park District, First Bank & Trust and Lakeshore Recycling Systems, MB Financial Bank and Buffalo Wild Wings, Martin Nissan and Evanston Subaru, Holiday Inn North Shore and Enterprise Rent-A-Car; the Curaugh Irish Pub and the Walking Company.

Committee member Gayle Weinhouse was still bringing in new sponsors as the days to the parade were growing short. Other announced sponsors include Cagan Management Group, Fitness Defined, Jazzercise, Sherman Dodge and a grant from the Rice Foundation.

Volunteers also have to address a plethora of questions and headaches that come up when any group takes on an event of this magnitude.

Is spray chalk a good alternative for pavement markings? What to do about an out-of-town drum and bugle corps that needs lodging and doesn’t want to check out until 10 p.m. to accommodate its next gig? (That proved possible — especially since everything parade-oriented had to be cleaned up and cleared away by the time the fireworks display is held at Niles West High School).

One issue this year’s parade organizers do not have to worry about, however, is the CTA Yellow Line train crossing Oakton and dividing the parade lineup. Perhaps the Fourth of July will be the only day of the summer when the projected five-month shutdown of the Yellow Line will be viewed as good news for the community.

“We still have a couple of weeks of down and dirty work,” Gerstner told the group at the end of the meeting. “But on the 5th of July, we’re going to be sitting back and smiling and the mayor is going to say, ‘Wow, that was a great parade.”

The Fourth of July Parade Committee is looking for volunteers and accepting sponsors. For more information about the parade, go to http://www.skokie4th.org.

misaacs@pioneerlocal.com

Twitter: @SKReview_Mike

Chicago Reader: Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center in Skokie is one of the best museums!

Best small museum, Skokie division

The museum's Room of RemembranceThe museum’s Room of Remembrance

COURTESY ILLINOIS HOLOCAUST MUSEUM

Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center

Over the past 60 years the Holocaust has been discussed and dissected and interpreted and reinterpreted so many times, it’s hard to imagine there’s anything left to say. The tiny Illinois Holocaust Museum in Skokie, however, continues to find new stories to tell. In addition to a permanent exhibit recounting the Holocaust through the perspective of Illinois residents who either experienced it or witnessed it as American GIs, it hosts just two shows every year, but its curatorial staff chooses them wisely. Over the past few years, the museum has featured exhibits on Hannah Senesh, a Hungarian poet/soldier who was captured during a rescue mission;Charlotte Salomon, a German artist who painted an extensive graphic autobiography while hiding from the Nazis in the south of France; and Ruth Gruber, an American photojournalist who documented the plight of Jewish refugees after World War II. But the museum doesn’t just focus on the events of World War II: it also looks at holocausts in other times and places, such as South Africa, Croatia, and the Soviet Union, and asks us to consider the cost of intolerance in our own lives. Every visit gives you something new to think about. Among the current special exhibitions is “Through Soviet Jewish Eyes: Photography, War, and the Holocaust,” which runs through September 7.