Light It Up Purple!

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“LIGHT IT UP PURPLE”

National Donate Life Month

April 2021

National Donate Life Month (NDLM) features an entire month of activities to help encourage Americans to register as organ, tissue, eye donors and to honor those that have saved lives through the gift of donation.

National Donate Life Month is the biggest donation observance of the year and as part of Gift of Hope’s awareness efforts, we want to turn the Peoria area purple to honor the lifesaving legacy of donors and encourage the community to join the registry. But we can’t do it alone. 

Join the purple crusade for the month of April!

Gift of Hope Organ & Tissue Donor Network is encouraging everyone to participate by putting a purple bulb(s) in your front porch, yard light, and/or outside businesses, organizations, hospitals, or fountains for the month of April to show support and promote awareness for organ, tissue, and eye donation.

Take a picture to post on your Facebook page and/or other social media.

Employment Opportunity

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VILLAGE OF PEORIA HEIGHTS POSITION DESCRIPTION

JOB TITLE: Tower Park Attendant
DEPARTMENT: Tower Park
REPORTS TO: Village Administrator or designee(s) DATE UPDATED: March 2020

Under the general supervision of the Village Administrator or designee(s) and the Tower Park Manager, staffs the Tower Park ticket booth as a representative of the Village of Peoria Heights. The Village of Peoria Heights is dedicated to providing quality, personalized service to its residents and guests, and, as such, this position is part of the Village’s mission to provide a superior quality of life.

ESSENTIAL JOB FUNCTIONS:

  • Greet and assist guests with a friendly and enthusiastic demeanor. Refer guests with inquiries outside Tower scope to Administration.

  • Demonstrate ability to maintain effective working relationships and professionalism with staff, elected officials, and the general public.

  • Demonstrate ability to work independently with minimum supervision.

  • Sell tickets for the Tower and accurately make change.

  • Use, monitor, and maintain all Tower elevator equipment to ensure all is in working order.

  • Notify Tower Park Manager of any maintenance issues in accordance with policy.

  • Keep the immediate area around the ticket booth clean, wipe down tables, open/close umbrellas, etc.

  • Clean Tower Park restrooms according to schedule or as needed.

  • Monitor ticket booth supplies and cleaning supplies and notify Tower Park Manager when items need

    restocked.

  • General Tower Park maintenance as assigned.

  • Performs other related work as necessary.

    MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS REQUIRED:

  • Maintains a high level of customer service and provides polite, knowledgeable, friendly assistance.

  • Ability to count and reconcile cash quickly and accurately.

  • Excellent communication skills

  • Proven problem-solving abilities

  • Detail oriented

  • Any combination of education, training and experience, which provides the required knowledge, skills,

    and ability to perform the essential functions of the job.

click here for application

Commercial Expense Reimbursement Grant Program

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The Village of Peoria Heights is excited to announce that we will be reopening applications for the Commercial Expense Reimbursement Grant Program and increasing the maximum grant award to $10,000 total.  Peoria Heights Business Owners may apply for reimbursement of eligible commercial expenses incurred from March 1 - December 30, 2020.

Applications will be accepted starting April 1, 2021 through May 28, 2021 or until funding is exhausted.  New and previous applicants are encouraged to apply.  To date, the Village of Peoria Heights has partnered with the Illinois Department of Commerce and Equal Opportunity to provide approximately $155,000 in funds through this program to 36 businesses in Peoria Heights.

click here for application

Peoria Heights wins award from labor management groups

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The Village of Peoria Heights has received recognition for its worker-friendly policies from a regional organization representing local employers and labor.

The Better Built Network’s 2020 “Building a Better Community Award” was presented to the Village Board at its March 16 meeting by Clint Drury, executive director of the West Central Illinois Building & Construction Trades Council – which goes to bat for 17,000 union workers in 13 counties – and Jimmy Dillon, the organization’s assistant director. Representing the management side was Dennis Higdon, executive director of the Greater Peoria Contractors and Suppliers Association.

Better Built is this area’s labor management organization. The groups just wanted to collectively express “our heartfelt gratitude for not forgetting workers at the price of development,” said Dillon. “Too many times that happens.” Indeed, when the organization was accepting nominations for the award, “it was a no-brainer to nominate the Heights for everything that they’ve done in trying to make the Peoria region and the Heights a better place to live and go to work.”

Among the actions that have been cited were the Village Board’s passage of “responsible bidder” and “prevailing wage” measures aimed at reassuring residents that work on all public projects will be done by skilled workers earning a fair income.

A self-described “Heights guy” – he grew up on Terrace Court and was a member of the second graduating class at Peoria Heights High School – Higdon expressed admiration at how the Heights has “reimagined itself” from the days when the Ben Franklin and Velvet Freeze were downtown landmarks.

“It’s really exciting to me ... We’re proud as an industry to be a part of that,” said Higdon. “Thanks so much for supporting ... the people that are paying living wages and offering training programs.

“We’re always on the lookout for new talent,” said Higdon, mentioning ongoing conversations with the local high school regarding a building trades curriculum.

“You guys are doing a great job and should be looked upon by many other towns as a beacon,” said Dillon.

“We’re very, very proud of that award,” said Heights Mayor Michael Phelan.

Water main break on Sciota

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Repairs are being made to a water main in the 600 block of Sciota Ave. Residents in the surrounding areas many experience temporarily discolored water. The discolored water poses no health or safety risk and should clear up in a few hours. There is NO boil order in effect. If you have any questions or would like to request iron remover for stained laundry, please contact the Water Department at 309-686-2375, ext 1.

Board gets first look at the fiscal year 2022 budget

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The Peoria Heights Village Board got its first look at the fiscal year 2022 budget this week, along with a status report on the current year’s finances. “Encouraging” may be the best word for it, given the circumstances of the last year.

The proposed operations budget is balanced and anticipates spending and revenues at right about $4.1 million.

The budget blueprint for the coming year arrives on the heels of an FYI 2021 budget with a projected surplus topping $600,000. That is remarkable given the Village’s dependence on sales tax revenues, in a year when the COVID-19 pandemic shuttered many local businesses for periods of time. That result is due, in part, to constant budget monitoring and fiscal discipline, but in fact revenues have significantly outperformed expectations for this year.

All in all, expenditures in 2022 look to go up about 2.7 percent – fundamentally a cost-of-living increase – over the current year’s actual spending. The biggest increase is in the fire department, owing to the first-ever employment of a paid fire chief and weekday on-call firefighter. The largest part of the budget, about 47 percent, continues to be the police department, followed by general administration at 18 percent and the street department at 14 percent.

Over the last three years, the Village has made significant progress in building up its fund balances, a cushion against future financial crises. Indeed, cash on hand is expected to top $1.9 million in 2022. That’s about six months of annual spending, which puts the Heights in the “best practices” category.

In a definite assist to that bottom line, the Village will see a sizeable increase in grant funding from other governmental bodies, rising from about 1 percent to 5 percent of the total budget.

Meanwhile, the Village intends to begin squirreling money away for some major upcoming capital projects, specifically a couple of large water mains. The whole idea is to move forward on some critical capital needs without accumulating debt.

“We have to start working on the Village infrastructure,” said Trustee Brandon Wisenburg, adding that what’s appropriate for homeowners in stressing the importance of maintaining their private properties also holds for the Village in terms of investing in public property.

“Small improvements add up to big improvements, especially sidewalks and streets and parks,” he said.

Other trustees agreed, arguing for an ongoing capital budget that puts curb and sidewalk and streetlight upkeep on a regular schedule.

“Because of being good fiscal stewards, we are getting ourselves into a position where we can start talking about ... a sidewalk program or doing more improvements to the water infrastructure,” said Mayor Michael Phelan. “As policymakers, we need to identify some bigger capital projects that are four to five years out.

“We’ll get there and we’re on our way,” said the mayor, who along with trustees had high praise for those who crafted the budget, specifically Village Administrator Dustin Sutton and Village Bookkeeper and Clerk Stephanie Turner.

The budget blueprint unveiled this past week is a draft, which means changes can yet be made. A final Village Board vote will come later this spring. The 2022 fiscal year begins on May 1.

Prospect Road to be blocked for community events

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This coming spring will see Prospect Road closed through Peoria Heights’ downtown on two occasions, both for community events that draw a significant number of visitors.

Heights officials will barricade Prospect between Seiberling and Marietta on Wednesday, March 17, otherwise known as St. Patrick’s Day. Downtown’s main artery also will be off limits to vehicles between Glen and Seiberling on Saturday, May 22, the date of the Heights’ Fine Art Fair.

Traffic will be rerouted to Columbus, where the speed limit will be reduced. Residents in the neighborhoods affected will be notified in advance. Signage will redirect traffic. Additional police will be out and about.

The festivities were canceled in 2020 due to the pandemic but had proved popular in previous years.

Closing off Prospect entirely “is the safest way,” said Village Administrator Dustin Sutton. A partial closure during the Fine Art Fair in 2019 did produce some safety issues, he said, which Village officials would like to avoid this time around.

St. Patrick’s Day will be “a scaled-down” event this year due to ongoing COVID-19 mitigations, said Billy Blasek, co-owner of W.E. Sullivan’s Irish Pub, who is working closely with the Peoria County Health Department. Capacity will be limited
inside the bar, but also outside, where entrances will be limited and staff and extra security will be monitoring the crowd size with clickers, said Blasek.

“Once it gets to a certain point, we can’t let anyone else in,” he said. There will be plenty of tables and chairs and free roaming will be discouraged in an attempt to comply with physical distancing guidelines, he said.

“We do understand what kind of crowds these bring,” said Sutton, especially in a year where there is likely to be a lot of pent-up demand due to the pandemic. “Even though we’re all excited about the event, we don’t want it to get out of hand.”

Meanwhile, the Village will donate $5,000 to the Peoria Heights Arts Collaborative, which will go toward various Fine Art Fair basic expenses.