Author Archives: Erik Brooks

Welcome to Wesolowski, Reidenbach & Sajdak, Our New City Attorneys

After more than 30 years of guidance by Joseph Murphy, South Milwaukee has a new city attorney: the Franklin-based firm of Wesolowski, Reidenbach & Sajdak.

The South Milwaukee City Council chose the firm at its April 19 meeting following a strong interview earlier this month.

The firm also represents Franklin, Hales Corners, Germantown, and Mequon and comes highly recommended. Chris Smith will be our lead attorney, but we will also benefit from the decades of collective municipal law experience of the three partners.

Please join me in welcoming Wesolowski, Reidenbach & Sajdak to South Milwaukee.

As I wrote previously, they will certainly have some big shoes to fill, but I’m confident they will deliver the legal counsel and representation we need to move the city forward.

As they put it in their initial letter to the city council … “While perhaps not stated in elegant terms, our internal operating procedure is four-pronged: i) tell the truth; ii) care about the people; iii) work hard; and iv) make no mistakes.”

I’m excited to see that procedure put into practice effective May 1.

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Made in South Milwaukee: Newest Downtown Business Owner Sees Value in History

From local history teacher to military artifact collector and small businessman — that’s the story of Craig Luther, who has opened Military Connection, a military collectibles store at 723 Milwaukee Ave.

I stopped by recently to welcome him to South Milwaukee and came away impressed with Craig, his store and his assortment of items from World War II onward, with a specialty in items from Desert Storm and Iraq.

The store, in the rear of the former Voice Journal and Kelly Driving School building, is open from noon to 8 p.m. on Mondays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesdays-Thursdays and Friday, Saturday and Sunday by appointment.

Craig, a former teacher at Divine Mercy School, also buys, sells and trades items at military collectible shows and online, including through another South Milwaukee business, MEARS Online Auctions.

Check them out on Facebook, or stop by, say hi and join me in welcoming Craig to downtown South Milwaukee. It’s great to see another destination retail business open in our city center. And there are more to come!

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Beautifying South Milwaukee One Neighborhood, One Home, at a Time

Updated flyer posted on May 5.

Our new Beautification Committee is doing some great things.

From bringing a new approach to our Christmas streetscaping to planning this summer’s downtown plantings, this group is making a real, visible difference in its first year.

Their latest effort has them focusing on our neighborhoods. Their goal: Partner with property owners to improve the curb appeal of their block, one home at a time.

Check out the flyer for information on discounts at local garden centers, opportunities for free or low-cost trees and plants, free planting advice and expertise, and even help with their  yard work, for those who need it. And look for more information soon on awards we’ll be offering for participants who make a real upgrade in the look of their properties.

Check out a high-resolution version of the flyer here.

Here’s to a more beautiful South Milwaukee!

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Big Children’s Rummage at Blakewood, for a Great Cause

Stop by Blakewood Elementary, 3501 Blakewood Ave., from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday (April 23) for a big children’s rummage sale.

A few details …

Children’s rummage including clothing sizes Newborn to 14/16, toys, games, books, movies, video games, sports equipment, seasonal and outdoor gear and equipment, and baby furniture and equipment!

Cash, check and credit card accepted.

DONATE items to the sale!! Donations accepted at Blakewood through Friday (today, 8-10 a.m.). 

Proceeds benefit our new playground! Play is essential to children’s development. Our older playground equipment is more than 30 years old and due to safety concerns will be removed at the end of the school year. Help us replace it and ensure a safe place for our students – and our community – to play!

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Help Wanted: Join a Board or Commission

On my first day as mayor, we created a new system for recruiting members to our boards and commissions.

It is a simple application process designed to introduce people to the opportunities we have available and to introduce me and city staff to a broader network of people who may have a passion or skill that we never knew.

It’s working. We’ve had dozens of applications in the past two years, and we’ve placed some of those applicants in key positions.

My continued ask: Apply. We regularly have openings to fill and, when we don’t, we want to keep a good list of interested candidates at the ready.

We currently have openings on these board and commissions …

  • Board of Appeals
  • Board of Health
  • Board of Review
  • Police and Fire Commission
  • Housing Authority

Interested? Learn more and apply here.

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Meet the Mayor This Saturday!

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Update as of 6/14/16: Something has come up, and I am cancelling my June 18 Meet the Mayor session. Look for a new date soon.

Just a quick reminder that I’m hosting my next Meet the Mayor session this Saturday, April 23, at The Revolution Hair Studio, 1017 Milwaukee Ave.

Join me from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., meet Natalie and Joy, and hear their story about why they have decided to make downtown South Milwaukee their home.

Bring your questions, comments or concerns, or just stop in to say hi.

And mark your calendars for 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday, June 18, when South Milwaukee’s newest business, Jen’s Sweet Treats, 907 Milwaukee Ave., is hosting my next Meet the Mayor session. (I won’t be holding a Meet the Mayor event in May.)

Thanks to The Revolution Hair Studio for hosting!

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A Summer of Youth Theatre

The Brooks family loves South Milwaukee Youth Theatre. I encourage you to see why for yourself, and have your kids audition for a show this summer.

Two shows are planned, with auditions in May. From the press release

The South Milwaukee Performing Arts Center and the South Milwaukee Youth Theatre Program (SMYT) will present Willy Wonka KIDS and Disney Alice in Wonderland, JR., fun and educational theatre programs. These programs help children and teens to be comfortable on stage and become more outgoing with their peers. To register your child, call our box office at 414-766-5049, Mon.-Thurs. 10am-4pm. Auditions are from 5-8pm, May 23rd for ages 5 through 11 and May 24th for ages 12 through 18. Pre-registration is required.

For more information, visit their website.

Photos are from last summer’s show, “Cinderella.” Both of my kids took part, and loved it. Pam Cullen is pictured in one — she is the SMYT director, and is terrific.

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Headlines!

Check out these South Shore headlines …

Also, NOW has published a new police blotter.

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The Food Trucks Are Back!

Some of the area’s top food trucks are coming back to town in the next few months, and I can’t be more excited about it.

Mark your calendars now for …

  • Sunday, May 22: Downtown Food Truck Festival. Grab lunch or an early dinner and check out live music at the site of the farmers’ market. Noon to 3 p.m. Sponsored by Educators Credit Union.
  • Saturday, July 30: This is a first – Food Truck Saturday at South Milwaukee Lionsfest! The Lions are turning over most of their food service to some of the top local food trucks for one day only. (You can still get the rib dinners, corn and potatoes from the Lions and, of course, soda and beer.) Food trucks are on site from noon to 10 p.m.
  • Sunday, September 18: Downtown Food Truck Festival #2. Noon to 3 p.m. Sponsored by Educators Credit Union.

Among the trucks planned at all three events: Streetza Pizza, Gouda Girls, Burgermeister, Eats and Treats, Falafel Guys, Meat on the Street and Oscar’s.

Thanks to South Milwaukee’s own Scott Baitinger, owner of Streetza Pizza, for organizing this, and bringing these trucks to town. I love great food, and challenging South Milwaukeeans’ palates (including my own). From the attendance at our first two events last year, it looks like people agree.

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Grand Openings: Jen’s Sweet Treats, Ferch’s, New-Look Ace Hardware

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I love grand openings, and there are three in May alone, with more to come.

Mark your calendars for …

  • Sunday, April 24: Get an early look at downtown’s newest business, Jen’s Sweet Treats, with “Sips & Sweets,” a chance to sample some yummy treats ahead of their official grand opening. Bring a toy to donate to their South Shore Santas program. 4-6 p.m. at 907 Milwaukee Ave.
  • Sunday, May 1: Jen’s Sweet Treats officially opens at 9 a.m. with a selection of cupcakes, muffins, cookies, turnovers, brownies and donuts.
  • Friday, May 13: South Milwaukee Ace Hardware, 1009 Marquette Ave. The noon ribbon cutting on Friday is the kickoff for an entire weekend of activities. Friday, it’s a Traeger grilling demo and grill giveaway. Saturday, there is a  South Milwaukee Lions Club cookout from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., an appearance by WTMJ radio’s Jeff Wagner and their Free Ride program from 1 to 3, and a Weber grilling demo and giveaway from 3 to 6. Sunday, it’s Family Day, with free popcorn and demonstrations by the South Milwaukee Fire Department. Free coffee and donuts every morning from 8 to 10., and there are sales and specials each day. More to come soon, as Ben and the Gil family looks to show off the big changes — and big investment — they’ve made to the store.
  • Friday, May 20: Ferch’s Malt Shoppe & Grille officially opens at 4 p.m., as they begin their first full season at Grant Park Beach. They have a lot planned. From rentals (lounge chairs, umbrellas, kayaks and paddle boards) to live music to movies to, of course, terrific burgers, custard and beer, it promises to be a great summer at the beach. Beach volleyball also returns this summer!

The new business momentum is real, and we’re just getting started.

 

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Check out This List of Downtown Events

Updated on April 23 with information on the Restore the Lagoon event. 

This is quite a list, and I can’t thank the organizers of these activities enough.

South Milwaukee is becoming a leader in cool, business- and community-building events, especially downtown. And we should all be proud of that.

Here is a high-resolution JPEG. Please share on social media, and tell your friends!

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Driving Economic (re)Development

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We’re nearing the end of our comprehensive and downtown planning process.

Now it’s time to begin. And we are.

After reading the document online, or learning about it more in person at City Hall or at the April 21 information meeting, I hope you agree that this document provides a bold, yet attainable, vision for South Milwaukee’s redevelopment and revitalization, starting in our city center.

Still, its remains words on a page. For now.

This plan can’t sit on a shelf and collect dust – it’s too important for the future of our city. We must work the plan, bringing it to life with initiatives big and small. Put another way, a plan is only as good as the will to bring it to life.

I have that will, and know many, many others do too.

That’s why we’re already working to make our plans a reality.

Last week, the South Milwaukee Common Council unanimously passed two key initiatives that show we’re serious about implementing this plan — serious about redeveloping this city.

  • Economic development infrastructure. The council voted to merge the Community Development Authority and Plan Commission, as well as form a Housing Authority. This will unify our economic development committee infrastructure and help us act more decisively in bringing key parts of the comprehensive and downtown plans to life. What led to this? When the CDA was formed more than a decade ago to oversee our tax incremental financing districts and Parkcrest housing development, it was given little actual power, as is the case in some other communities. Instead, the CDA was primarily an advisory body to the city council — at times advising on the same projects and issues the Plan Commission is. We are removing this duplication and streamlining our redevelopment efforts, no matter if the project is on TIF property not. My focus as mayor is to lead the charge in making our plans reality. The newly constituted Plan Commission will help us do that.
  • Downtown streetscaping. The council also approved a contract with Graef for development of Milwaukee Avenue streetscaping concepts, starting us on the road toward delivery of a key recommendation of the plan. After sharing the concepts with the appropriate committees (Downtown Advisory, Beautification, etc.) and gaining approval from the council, the goal is to begin some work later this summer/fall, continuing into 2017. It will be phased, recognizing that while the $250,000 in capital money already earmarked for Milwaukee Avenue streetscaping work will accomplish a lot – and demonstrate an early win and a commitment to downtown revitalization by the city – additional funds will be necessary to complete the vision. (Our Beautification Committee is already hard at work with streetscaping plans for this summer, and I’m excited to see what they deliver.)

And that’s just the start. Several other significant initiatives under consideration will also help bring these plans to life in these early days …

  • Downtown revitalization grant. A plan to provide an enhanced grant program for new and existing businesses was first discussed in late 2015, and it’s gaining momentum. The program would replace the existing façade grant, putting more funds in play for more types of projects — up to $30,000 in matching funds, as proposed — but focused in our city center. We took early feedback from the council, Plan Commission, Downtown Advisory Committee and worked with Graef to develop a revised program to share with the council. That work is now complete, and the DAC and Plan Commission have recommended approval of the initiative. I expect the council will consider the revised plan at its May 3 meeting, along with the final comprehensive and downtown plans. Passage will show a real commitment from the city to existing and potential new downtown businesses.
  • Downtown “ownership.” The No. 1 recommendation from the downtown plan under consideration is clear: Work toward creation of a group or organization that “owns” downtown revitalization efforts. Figuring this out will enable so many other initiatives. We want to begin this work ASAP. There are a number of potential approaches to this (business improvement districts, Main Street Program, etc.), and it will take significant work to flesh out these concepts, determine what works best for South Milwaukee, and build community support. At the May 3 meeting, we will seek council approval for consultant support for this foundational work.
  • We also continue to partner with Growing South Milwaukee, the local group working to establish a community garden in our city. We continue to discuss the former water tower site in the 1200 block of Milwaukee as a prime site. Lease negotiations continue, and I’m hopeful we can see this downtrodden space come to life with something the entire community can be proud of.

Lastly, we are planning to bring before the council this summer a contract proposal to begin work on the potential rebranding of South Milwaukee. This is much more than a logo and slogan for the city. It’s opening a conversation about the preferred identity of South Milwaukee, and, importantly, how we bring that identity to life. Marketing plans, street signage, digital efforts – all of this, and more, will be on the table at some point. But first things first: beginning the community dialog to develop and launch the new citywide brand. Much more to come here.

Have a plan, work the plan. That’s been our goal all along in undertaking this process the past year. With these concrete steps, and more to come, we are indeed committed to working the plan, from day one.

As always, we welcome any and all feedback as we begin this journey. Together.

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Partnering with Local Schools to Celebrate Arbor Day

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The City of South Milwaukee is proud to once again be partnering with the South Milwaukee School District on a 2016 Arbor Day Celebration. 

The Street Department will be planting one tree at each one of the South Milwaukee elementary schools to commemorate our second-annual Arbor Day event.

Trees go in the ground starting April 22.

I want to thank Assistant Street Superintendent Dan Ratajski for his leadership on this event — another symbol of our city’s commitment to enhancing our urban forest. 

Much more to come in this area this spring, summer and beyond. 

Communities must invest in trees. And South Milwaukee is.

 

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Now, the Watershed Work Begins

It was a full house at Tuesday’s Oak Creek Watershed kickoff meeting at City Hall, and I want to thank everyone who attended to learn more about what the next two to three years will look like as we embark on this important work.

If you missed it, you can check out the Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission presentation here.

Field work begins this summer, with the first of five more stakeholder meetings come up then too. And much, much more to come from there.

Indeed, we’re just getting started. But we’re getting started. And that’s a big deal.

Here are my remarks from last night … I mean every word of them. Let’s roll!

Good evening, and, on behalf of the city, welcome to South Milwaukee and the Oak Creek Watershed.

About 2/3 of our city sits in the watershed, including some of the most public-facing parts of that watershed, from the parkway to the Mill Pond to Grant Park … so, needless to say, we take revitalization and renewal of this resource very seriously. In many ways, our promising future depends on a healthy watershed. That’s why I’m so excited about today.

April 12, 2016. That’s the day we begin cleaning up the Oak Creek watershed for our kids, their kids, and their kids. Generations to come will benefit from what we’re doing here.

Of course, today is just the beginning.

Have a plan, work the plan. It’s the mentality the city has adopted around our ongoing work in updating our comprehensive plan and creating a first-ever downtown plan for South Milwaukee.

And it’s the mentality we’re adopting here.

Have a plan, work the plan. In other words, ensure that a plan is more than the words on a page. Commit to bringing it to life. This plan will give us the information we need to do just that.

Let the journey begin!

I want to close by thanking some of the partners who have made this happen …

  • To Supervisor Jursik for her years of leadership in this area. While we’ll deeply miss her advocacy for the South Shore and the Oak Creek watershed, I am confident her replacement on the board will continue to carry this torch ….
  • Thank you to the Parks Department, Director John Dargle and the county administration for their unwavering support in making this planning process a reality …
  • To leaders from all six municipalities in the 28 square-mile watershed – including Oak Creek, Cudahy, Greenfield, Franklin and Greenfield — who publicly supported this from day one …
  • To MMSD, as strong partners throughout this process. They are deeply committed to promoting clean watersheds across the region, and they are indeed putting their money where their mouth is as the planning project’s lead funding agency … 
  • Thank you to the Fund for Lake Michigan, which has awarded $125,000 in grants in the past year toward this plan and a separate study of watershed water quality …
  • To SEWRPC, which has been part of these discussions from the start. I can’t think of a better organization to do this study … 
  • And, of course, thank you to our local citizen groups, including the Friends of the Mill Pond and Friends of Grant Park, as well as Restore the Lagoon. Without their passion and advocacy, none of this would be possible.

And finally, I want to thank everyone in this room.

My ask: Be part of this process. Be heard. This is your watershed, and everyone here has a stake in being sure it is restored to health and vibrancy once again.

Attend the public meetings. Offer your comments. Help shape the plan. Own the plan. Then, once the plan is approved, join me in getting behind it to drive real change.

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Taking a Virtual Tour of the World, and Beyond

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Our students got to visit the moon, the jungle, and the Mayan ruins all in one class period.  It doesn’t get much cooler than that.

That’s the report from Brian Gannon, student learning and technology coordinator for the South Milwaukee School District.

He was speaking of the Google Expeditions Pioneer program, in which select schools across the country are getting the chance to use virtual reality headsets to explore sites from around the world — universe, even.

Last week, kids at Lakeview Elementary School took part in the pilot, and TMJ4 was there to do a story. Check it out here. Rawson students are also getting an opportunity. Mr. Gannon called it an “awesome experience” and thanked technology integration coach Tammy Lind for helping bring it to South Milwaukee …

The Google Expeditions program is an expansion of the Google Cardboard apps that have become more and more popular. Google envisioned ways to use this technology in schools by allowing teachers to choose a destination and bring all the students there with the press of a button. Google began touring around the country with these last year and has visited about 20 major cities in the U.S. On April 4, Google began its first stop in Wisconsin by choosing a small number of schools, based on people who signed up for the Expeditions explorer program. Tammy Lind was one of those people. Google contacted Tammy about visiting two schools in South Milwaukee – Lakeview, and Rawson. As of now, Expeditions is just in pilot mode.  In order to make it a reality for our schools in the near future, we would need to find/purchase a classroom set of old smartphones.  We could then purchase the viewers (Google Cardboard) and install the expeditions app for teacher use. 

Learn more about the Google Expeditions Pioneer program here.

Cool stuff.

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