Category Archives: Oak Creek

Oak Creek Decides To Stand Pat On Alcohol Sale Hours And Other Headlines

The Oak Creek City Council has decided against expanding the number of hours alcohol can be sold at grocery, liquor and other “off-premise” stores.

Check out the story here.

You’ll recall that the South Milwaukee City Council in December approved allowing liquor sales as early as 6 a.m.

And check out these other local headlines of note:

Also, South Milwaukee NOW has published a new police blotter. Among the incidents: a snowblower theft and broken garage window in the 200 block of north Chicago Avenue and a burglary in the 200 block of Montana Avenue.

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Woman Found Dead In Lake Michigan Off Oak Creek

Update: The woman has been identified as 22-year-old Brittany Finley of South Milwaukee, according to the Journal Sentinel.

A woman’s body was found Tuesday in Lake Michigan near 5th Avenue and Bender Park in Oak Creek.

Check out the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel story here. From it:

About 10:29 a.m., firefighters and police officers responded to a report of a body washed up on shore near Bender Park.

Officers asked plant operators to open the gate to a closed fishing pier on the north end of the property shortly before 11 a.m. Tuesday so that they could get access to the lakeshore, said Scott Royer, general manager for Veolia Water Milwaukee. Veolia Water operates the South Shore and Jones Island treatment plants for the Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District.

Here is Fox 6 coverage.

I’ve been told the woman is from South Milwaukee, and that there is no evidence of foul play. Per the Journal Sentinel story, the woman appeared to have died from exposure.

I’ll keep you posted when I learn more.

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Proud Past, Indeed: Celebrating South Milwaukee And Oak Creek’s Civil War History

Oak Creek Patch has published a well-done series of articles on Oak Creek Township’s impact on the Civil War. And it was significant.

The township — which included what is now South Milwaukee, once upon a time — sent dozens of people to the war, including some from prominent families, and they fought in some major battles.

Check out the series here. It’s worth the read. From it:

Oak Creek Township consisted of modern-day Oak Creek and South Milwaukee. White pioneers had arrived in the late 1830s and 1840s, at a time when Native Americans hunted and fished in the area. Wisconsin became a state in 1848, South Milwaukee incorporated as a village in 1892 and a city a few years later, and Oak Creek did not become a city until 1955.

A total of 38 men from the township served in Company K of the 24th Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry, according to “Wisconsin Volunteers, War of the Rebellion, 1861-1865,” an invaluable research book that has been put online by the Wisconsin Historical Society. One of them joined in 1864, so the number from Oak Creek when the company went into the war in 1862 was 37.

The dead included two cousins – Frederick Fowle of Company K, in 1863 of wounds received in the Tennessee battle, and Royal Fowle, an artilleryman in another unit who died of disease in 1864 in Louisville, Ky. Disease was an equal-opportunity killer of Union soldiers and Confederates in the war; many units lost more men to illness than in battles.

Frederick was the son of Frederick Fowle Sr. and Electra Rawson, while Royal was the son of John Fowle Jr. and Lavina Fowle, according to Judy Balestrieri, a descendant of the Fowle clan and a mainstay of the South Milwaukee Historical Society.

They were grandsons of John Fowle Sr., who was one of the first pioneers of the area and built two sawmills on the waterway that was named Oak Creek. The soldiers’ uncle, Horace Fowle (son of John Sr. and Sarah Dibley Fowle), built a Queen Anne Victorian home in 1892 that everyone today knows as the clubhouse in Grant Park.

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Oak Creek Mayor Bolender Dead At Age 68

Update: Here is a more detailed story in the Journal Sentinel, and here are details from Oak Creek Patch.

Oak Creek Mayor Dick Bolender has died.

Oak Creek Patch broke the story this morning, and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel has confirmed it.

Bolender’s death, which reportedly came at his home on Saturday, comes after he announced earlier this week that he would not seek re-election this spring.

I’ll keep you posted when I learn more. In the meantime, let’s keep the Bolender family — and all those who knew and respected the Oak Creek mayor — in our prayers.

Did you know Mayor Bolender? What are your memories of him? What is his legacy? Post your comments below.

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New Concept: Mixed Use Proposal Surfaces For Land At College And Pennsylvania

A mixed-use development with retail, industrial and multi-family housing is now the focus for the 64 acres of land that the U.S. Postal Service had been eyeing for a new mail facility.

The Oak Creek City Council heard details of the conceptual plan at its meeting on Tuesday night. Oak Creek Patch has the story. From it:

This type of development is more viable than a postal facility and would also give the United States Postal Service an exit strategy to get out of its agreement to develop the processing center, said Scott Yauck of Cobalt Partners.

Oak Creek officials like the proposal because it would get the land back on the tax rolls – the land is currently non-taxable since it’s owned by the U.S. government.

It would also seem to be exactly the type of economic development that local officials were hoping for with a new-and-improved College Avenue.

But neighbors of the would-be development, just like they opposed the United States Postal Service building, voiced their displeasure of the plans Tuesday.

Most of their angst seemed to center on the multi-family housing aspect. Residents said they were fine with retail located directly next to the intersection of College and Pennsylvania. An industrial component, as proposed near the railroad tracks, would probably be something along the lines of an electrical parts distributor and unlikely to be seen from the residential neighborhood.

But residents said they did not want multi-family housing that close to their single-family neighborhood. They worried about the increase in traffic, impact on their property values and the type of people who would move in, among other concerns.

Of course, this development has a direct impact on South Milwaukee and the 4th District — it’s across the street. I am working on getting additional information and will keep you posted as the process unfolds.

In the meantime, what do you think? Post your comments below!

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Oak Creek We Energies Bluff Collapse Update

Cleanup is under way, and the scope of this week’s bluff collapse at the Oak Creek We Energies power plant is just now becoming known.

Check out the Journal Sentinel story here. From it:

An estimated 2,500 cubic yards of coal ash and soil – enough to fill more than 208 large dump trucks – was pushed into Lake Michigan in Monday’s bluff collapse and landslide at the We Energies’ Oak Creek Power Plant, a state environmental official said Friday.

The slide carried 25,000 cubic yards of ash and soil down the slope and about 10% of the load washed into the lake, said Ann Coakley, director of the waste and materials management bureau for the Department of Natural Resources.

Samples of coal ash and lake water were collected this week for testing to determine the environmental impact of the ash slide, officials said. Tests will show the levels of heavy metals and other contaminants in the ash.

Test results were not available Friday, Coakley said.

Here is a WISN 12 story on the cleanup.

I also asked South Milwaukee Water Superintendent Doug Fischer about the potential impact of the bluff collapse to South Milwaukee, and he said he was not concerned given our filtration processes and because the debris made its way south of Oak Creek, not north to South Milwaukee.

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Scary Stuff: No One Hurt In Oak Creek We Energies Plant Bluff Collapse

The pictures and videos that have emerged following Monday’s bluff collapse at the We Energies plant in Oak Creek are nothing short of stunning.

Here is Journal Sentinel coverage, and here is a story and video from WISN 12. From the Oak Creek Patch story:

The collapse happened after an embankment gave away about 11:15 a.m., causing a mudslide and sending a pickup truck and two other vehicles into the lake.

No one was injured. In fact, very few people were working in the area and saw the collapse, Manthey said. Most of the workers will be back tomorrow.

“We’re incredibly fortunate there were no injuries,” Manthey said at a press conference Monday afternoon.

The accident was at a construction site where an air-quality control system was being implemented and did not cause any disruption to the plant’s operations.

Thank God no one was hurt … and hopefully there are no long-lasting environmental impacts.

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