Category Archives: Community

Second Parenting Focus Group Planned

The South Milwaukee Health Department is holding another focus group aimed at “looking at ways we can support the parents and future parents in our South Milwaukee community.”

It’s from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Monday, Nov. 5, at the South Milwaukee Library. Learn more in this flyer.

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South Milwaukee Looks Good In Pink

Pink delivered some green at Tuesday’s City Council meeting, as students from South Milwaukee schools presented checks totaling more than $11,000 to representatives from the Susan G. Komen Foundation during a brief ceremony.

Here is the tally:

  • South Milwaukee High School: $9,748
  • Rawson Elementary: $510
  • Lakeview: $325.52
  • Blakewood: $213

Congratulations to everyone on their fundraising efforts, from the DECA students at the high school to Police Chief Ann Wellens’ work in uniting the community — including city officials — around this wonderfully worthwhile cause.

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Guest Blog: Oak Creek Cleanup Is Saturday

I just got this email from Nancy Wucherer from the Friends of the Mill Pond and Oak Creek Watercourse …

It’s that time to round up the volunteers for the Fall 2012 Cleanup of the Oak Creek this Saturday October 13th, 2012 from 8am to 12 noon.  We’ll meet at the South Milwaukee High School parking lot – North End.

A Tan Hyundai Sonata will have vests, gloves, bags and water.  If you have boots that would be great, bring extra socks or shoes in case you get wet.  If your students come we ask that some adults participate in the cleanup.

Our targeted area is N Chicago Ave going west to Rawson Ave.  We may go beyond that depending on how many people come.  Lunch will be provided by FOMP down at the Mill Pond Warming House.  We would appreciate knowing approximately how many will be volunteering so we’ll have enough food. 

The debris will be pick up by Milwaukee County Parks Dept.  Hope for good weather!!  Any questions please drop me a line at NancyWucherer@gmail.com or give me a call at 414-571-1191 and leave message.

Thanks again to Nancy and all the great work her group does.

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Bring The Kids! South Milwaukee Farmers’ Market Concludes Fourth Season With Fall Family Festival

It’s hard to imagine, but the fourth season of the South Milwaukee Downtown Market ends this Thursday … and it does with a truly special event.

The Fall Family Festival is back, and kids of all ages are invited to stop by for free pumpkin decorating, apple bobbing, face painting, trick-or-treating and more. We’ll be giving away up to 200 pumpkins as part of the event, so bring your family and friends!

Like always, hours are 3 to 7 p.m., and we’re located on 11th and Milwaukee Avenues. Students from St. Thomas More High School will be helping out.

Check out the press release.

And mark your calendars: We’ll be holding our annual Christmas Market on Saturday, Dec. 8, at South Milwaukee High School. Hours are 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Vendors can find an application here. Stay tuned for more details.

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Keeping In Touch: Online South Milwaukee Newsletter Published

The city has published its “Keeping in Touch” online newsletter, with news and information from all of our city departments.

Check it out here.

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Report: Easter Seals Moving From Downtown South Milwaukee To West Allis

Update: Here is a Journal Sentinel story.

Check out the story in BizTimes.com here. From it:

Easter Seals Southeast Wisconsin, the local affiliate of Easter Seals Inc., will move its headquarters from South Milwaukee and its child development center from Milwaukee to the former CU Fleet Building at 2222 S. 114th St. in West Allis, the organization announced today.
 
Easter Seals closed on its purchase of the 25,000-square-foot building earlier this week.The organization will move its administrative offices and its adult day program from 1016 Milwaukee Ave., South Milwaukee, and its child development center at North 53rd Street and Burleigh Street in Milwaukee, to the West Allis building.East Seals purchased the building from Guardian Credit Union. No purchase price was disclosed but the building is “valued at” $1.8 million, Easter Seals spokeswoman Vicki Hastings said.

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Pink Power: South Milwaukee High School Plans Chicken Dinner Fundraiser For Komen

Update: South Milwaukee is also going blue on Monday — to Stomp Out Bullying. It’s Blue Shirt Day, and staff and students at the high school are being asked to dress the part. Why not join them?

South Milwaukee is going pink again in October … and it starts with a spit-roasted chicken dinner fundraiser on Saturday, Oct. 13.

The event, hosted by the South Milwaukee High School DECA chapter, is from 5:30 to 8 p.m. at the high school’s Commons area.

Rupena’s is catering the dinner. Other events include a “Pink Shop,” with pink items for sale, a raffle, tarot readings and student music.

Cost is $12 for adults and $8 for children 12 and under. It’s $10 and $7 if you order ahead by Oct. 5. (Ordering ahead is recommended.)

All proceeds benefit the Susan G. Komen Foundation.

For more information or to order tickets, stop by the high school or contact Jason Molus (688-8886 or studentmolus@gmail.com) or Marty Johnson (766-5169 or mjohnson@sdsm.k12.wi.us).

Other events planned to raise breast cancer awareness in October include a high school pep rally and Common Council meeting ceremony on Tuesday, Oct. 16. I’ll keep you posted on those events … and please let me know of other activities you know about.

Go pink!

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Fighting To Save The Mill Pond

More than 1,800.

That’s how many signatures were on petitions a group of citizens submitted to the City Council and Milwaukee County Supervisor Pat Jursik last week asking for the Mill Pond to be dredged – returning the waterway to its past glory.

Former Alderwoman Mary Nelson made the presentation to the council, and she offered a few words in support of the effort to restore the Mill Pond. Her message: The pond is an important part of South Milwaukee’s heritage and needs to be dredged so it can be brought back to its former beauty and use as a recreational attraction (including ice skating).

Mayor Tom Zepecki also spoke briefly, saying the city can play a role in doing so, but the Mill Pond is county property, and the county must lead on any improvements – including what could be a $1 million dredging project that may not last a decade.

Jursik’s message to the council: Addressing the Mill Pond is a complex issue – a “community decision” and a “shared responsibility” involving the county, city and others.

She stressed her role in trying to bring units together in the past couple years to deal with the short- and long-term future of the Mill Pond and Oak Creek watercourse – a future that may or may not involve saving the pond, or dredging it. Jursik noted that the Wisconsin Department Natural Resources has an order to remove the dam, but it’s not being acted on it, and the most recent attempt to dredge in the late 1990s was poorly done and did not last long.

A broader watershed plan is necessary, Jursik said, and that’s where the focus should be, as well as with Oak Creek bank restoration. (Jursik has helped secure $267,000 toward this purpose in the county’s current capital budget.)

So, where do I stand? I strongly support restoring the vitality of Oak Creek and the Mill Pond and making it a community attraction once again. It’s not now. The Mill Pond should be a source of South Milwaukee pride. Now, it’s an eyesore, in desperate need of improvement.

I credit the Friends of the Mill Pond and Oak Creek Watercourse for what they’ve done to try and stem the decline and begin restoration efforts. And I thank folks like Mary Nelson and Pat Jursik for driving the dialog here. It’s one we need to have.

But what we need now are facts … a detailed look at options for the Mill Pond and Oak Creek that will help drive decisions around what the solution looks like and who pays for what.

The key question that needs to be answered: What is the collective vision for the Mill Pond and Oak Creek, and how do we get there?

It’s a debate I – and apparently more than 1,800 others — look forward to because something needs to be done. That’s something we can all agree on.

Of course, I’d like to know what you think about this. What role should the city play in making improvements at the Mill Pond? Post your comments below.

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Filed under Community, Milwaukee County, Oak Creek

Witek Fundraiser Set For Sept. 29

WTMJ has an interview with Craig Witek — father of 12-year-old Gage, who died while playing the “choking game” at his South Milwaukee home on Saturday — in this story.

The goal: Spread the word about the dangers of this behavior and to prevent another tragedy.

The story also references a fundraiser on Saturday, Sept. 29, at the Monkey Bar in Milwaukee, 1619 S. 1st St. It runs from 5 p.m. to midnight. I’ll keep you posted when I learn more about event.

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Health Department Plans “Positive Parenting” Focus Group

The South Milwaukee Health Department is holding a focus group on “positive parenting” on Monday Oct. 1.

The event is from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Health Department inside City Hall.

See a flyer here. From it:

All you have to do is come and discuss promoting positive parenting in South Milwaukee. Bring your thoughts and ideas. ANY resident is welcome to participate.

Please spread the word!

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Wanted: Adults To Help Other Adults With Their English Skills

The South Milwaukee School District’s English as a Second Language Department is seeking volunteers to support parents of English language learners.

It’s an easy ask: Spend 50 minutes on three straight Monday nights speaking English with parents and guardians of South Milwaukee students who are polishing up their language skills.

See the flyer here.

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Public Policy Forum Releases South Shore Dispatch Consolidation Report

The Public Policy Forum is out with its report on the potential consolidation of the South Milwaukee, Cudahy and St. Francis emergency dispatch centers. And it shows some potentially significant cost savings.

Here is the report, which I’m still digesting.

Among the highlights from the report’s executive summary …

  • “By consolidating their dispatch operations into an independent consolidated dispatch center, the three cities could reduce their current combined dispatch staff, thus decreasing annual operating expenditures by approximately $132,000 to $256,000.
  • By consolidating their dispatch operations into an independent consolidated dispatch center, the three cities could eliminate the need to collectively replace two or three dispatch consoles, producing equipment savings within the next five years of approximately $400,000 to $600,000.
  • If one of the three cities were to perform dispatch services under contract with the other two, or if the three cities contracted with a neighboring jurisdiction for dispatch services, then substantial additional savings could be generated.
  • Weighing potential cost savings against the loss of local control and the potential loss of 24-hour staffing at each city’s police headquarters is a difficult endeavor.
  • If the three cities do not decide to pursue consolidation of their dispatch operations, then they may wish to at least review whether the administrative tasks assigned to dispatchers might be more appropriately assigned to clerical staff.”

Of course, this is much more than a dollars-and-cents issue. The conclusion of the report states as much:

The report concludes that each city must consider whether to pursue an independent consolidated dispatch center – or to jointly contract for this service with a different jurisdiction – within the context of its own short-term and long-term financial circumstances and public safety needs.

Indeed, this is a complicated issue that demands more debate.

And, as we do that, this point from the report seems especially salient to me: “City leaders also should consider whether the possible pursuit of other public safety consolidation may further dictate the logic of consolidating dispatch services.” With the separate fire consolidation summary still underway and not expected to be completed until early 2013, it might be best to wait and see how all of the pieces fit together before acting (or not acting) only on dispatch consolidation.

Also, keep in mind that the study’s scope was to examine the potential for creation of a new stand-alone dispatch center merging the three existing operations. Public Policy Forum did not look at other potential combinations, including one community potentially contracting its service to the other two. That would be information I’d also like to see.

Still, this study is a great start and provides a good basis for a consolidation decision that I am sure is coming soon. I look forward reading and learning more — and the discussion.

I enter that debate in the same place I’ve always been: I’m open to consolidating city services where possible, but only if the quality of the consolidated service won’t suffer and if we can actually save money in doing it. Those are some big “ifs.”

Of course, I’d like to know what you think of the report and the potential for consolidation. Post your comments below!

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Filed under City Council, City Services, Community, Cudahy, Fire, Oak Creek, Police

The Tragic Death Of Gage Witek

Here is a heartbreaking YouTube tribute to Gage. The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel has a few more details, and there is also coverage from Fox 6 and WTMJ.

Gage Witek is the 12-year-old boy and South Milwaukee Middle School student who died much, much too soon at his home on Saturday.

Here is a copy of the note South Milwaukee Middle School Principal Jim Hendrickson sent home to parents on Tuesday. From it:

At this time, the police and medical examiner have ruled this death accidental. … Rumors of bullying and suicide have been circulating. These untrue stories have been disruptive as the family and school community go through the grieving process. Across the nation, children are experimenting with various choking games and other risky behaviors. Please talk with your child about these unsafe practices.

Here is Gage’s obituary. Services are Friday in Racine.

Please keep Gage’s family and friends in your thoughts and prayers, and hug your kids a bit tighter tonight. I know I will.

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Filed under Community, Fire, Police, Schools

South Milwaukee Health Department Offers Flu Clinics

The South Milwaukee Health Department is offering walk-in flu clinics every Thursday from 2 to 4 p.m.

Cost of the shot for adults over age 18 is $28. Kids who live in South Milwaukee are free.

Pneumonia shots are also available. No appointment is necessary.

Learn more here, or call the department at 768-8055.

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Bug Education: Emerald Ash Borer Presentation Scheduled Before Sept. 18 Council Meeting

I worry South Milwaukee is late in joining the fight against the emerald ash borer … but at least we’re taking the first step. We’re learning about the issue, so we can make informed decisions on what to do next.

That’s why I’m glad Rebecca Lane, Oak Creek’s forester, is speaking at a meeting of the Public Works & Public Property Committee on Tuesday, Sept. 18, starting at 6:30 p.m. at City Hall (before our City Council meeting at 7).

Learn more about the ash borer here … and I’ll keep you posted on our response to this.

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