
Indian Prairie District 204 school board OKs $2.3 million LED lighting project
Crone Middle School, Scullen Middle School and Brookdale Elementary School, all in Naperville, will be getting their fluorescent fixtures replaced with LED ones, per Monday's meeting agenda.
The lighting work at Crone, Scullen and Brookdale is set to begin in the fall, the district's chief school business official Matthew Shipley told The Beacon-News on Tuesday. It will be completed on second shift after school hours and won't affect school operations.
In a memo to the board and district Superintendent Adrian Talley, District 204 Director of Building Operations John Robinson said that the new fixtures will lower the district's energy bills and qualify for a minimum of $60,000 in utility rebates.
In March, the district approved LED fixture replacements at Metea Valley High School and Fischer, Granger and Still middle schools that are set to be completed over the summer, according to past reporting.
On Monday, the board also approved building permits for summer HVAC work, per the meeting agenda, the hiring of two construction management firms for major renovations going on at Waubonsie Valley High School and Neuqua Valley High School and an updated contract with architect Wight & Co. for the Waubonsie and Neuqua projects.
These renovation updates add to the growing list of the district's upcoming capital projects — like a $7.6 million auditorium renovation at Waubonsie in Aurora, secure entryways at 11 district elementary schools and flooring replacements and paving work at schools across the district.
Indian Prairie is undergoing major capital work as a result of the passage of a referendum question in November, in which voters approved the district's proposal to sell $420 million in bonds for facility upgrades, according to past reporting.
The bonds will be issued through 2029 for projects through 2032, Shipley previously said. But after those funds are used up, the district will need to find a way to generate funding for capital projects while they're paying off the bond issuances, Shipley reiterated in a presentation on Monday about the district's budget for next year.
Also at Monday's meeting, the district swore in its returning board members, who were reelected by voters on April 1. Current board President Laurie Donahue, who was reelected in April, was again selected by the school board as president. Current board Secretary Supna Jain was chosen to be vice president by the board, and board member Allison Fosdick was selected as the board secretary.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Newsweek
2 hours ago
- Newsweek
Donald Trump Aims New US Sanctions at Russian Fleet: Report
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The Trump administration is weighing additional sanctions on Russia's so-called "shadow fleet" of oil tankers if President Vladimir Putin does not agree to a ceasefire in Ukraine by Friday, The Financial Times reported. Two people familiar with the White House's internal discussions told the FT that further measures against the fleet are viewed as a relatively straightforward way to increase pressure on Russia. A third person close to the administration told the news outlet that the U.S. is considering a broader set of options, but sanctions on the shadow fleet remain under consideration. As major generators of Russia's export revenues, oil and natural gas have been the focus of western-led sanctions to choke Moscow's war machine. However, Russia has set up a shadow fleet of vessels to circumvent a price cap on seaborne oil and the export continues to swell the Kremlin's coffers. Russia's piped natural gas industry has been hit hard by the war. But seaborne LNG exports from Russia to the EU are on the rise and Russian-built carriers are becoming an increasingly important part of the shadow fleet. Blacklisting ships in the fleet would represent the first U.S. sanctions on Moscow since Donald Trump returned to the White House in January. The shadow fleet typically avoids using Western insurers, flag registries, and other maritime services, making enforcement of sanctions on vessel owners difficult. This is a breaking news story. Updates to follow.


Newsweek
7 hours ago
- Newsweek
Why Reject Trump? It's the Corruption, Stupid
We all know Americans vote with their wallets. President Bill Clinton's first campaign ran on the slogan: "It's the economy, stupid." Today, with questionable economic news, maybe this means trouble for President Donald Trump. But forget the economy. Americans should be more concerned about the Trump-led corruption that has settled over Washington like a poisonous fog. Believe it. It's never been like this before. Can you name another president who accepted for his personal benefit a $400 million airplane from a foreign government? All of this is utterly unprecedented. A photo from Feb. 12, 2000, featuring Donald Trump, Melania Trump, Jeffrey Epstein, and Ghislaine Maxwell at Mar-a-Lago, Palm Beach, Fla. is seen. A photo from Feb. 12, 2000, featuring Donald Trump, Melania Trump, Jeffrey Epstein, and Ghislaine Maxwell at Mar-a-Lago, Palm Beach, Fla. is not elsewhere. At various times Trump has held up as his exemplars both Russia under Vladimir Putin and Hungary under Victor Orban. Yet Russia's economy under Vladimir Putin turned into a kleptocracy benefiting his friends while the rest of the country got poverty and war. While Orban engages in crony capitalism and crushes the rule of law, his country's economy is a basket case. Donald Trump wants their sort of power for the same ends. It's about extracting money. This past week, Trump's corrupt pursuits continued with a disgrace that should be burned into the conscience of everyone in Washington and the nation too. The CBS bribery transaction is now complete. Just before his election, Trump sued CBS seeking money for himself over a segment he said made Kamala Harris look too good. The lawsuit was widely denounced as a joke. But pending before the federal government since September 2024 was an application to transfer to Skydance the CBS news licenses of CBS' parent company, Paramount. While the suit continued, the application languished—for almost a year. Meanwhile, the head of the FCC revived and pursued an investigation of alleged CBS wrongdoing while CBS negotiated with Trump's personal attorneys. And then, wham! On July 2, 2025, CBS announced that it would give Donald Trump $16 million for his library to settle the lawsuit. On July 14, CBS late-night host Stephen Colbert described the CBS payment as a bribe. The next day, Skydance CEO David Ellison met with FCC Chairman Brendan Carr. We don't know what passed between them, but just two days later CBS chose that particular moment to announce that for "purely a financial decision" it would soon cancel Colbert's show, the most popular show in late-night television. And now we know that the bribery worked. One week after Colbert was fired and a few weeks after the $16 million was agreed, the FCC announced that the CBS license transfer was approved. As Sherlock Holmes might have put it, the connection is "elementary, my dear Watson." It's too bad that economic news dominated headlines rather than the consummation of the most obvious presidential crime in history. It follows lesser Trump crimes involving extortion of money using frivolous lawsuits against ABC and Facebook, and may be joined by payoffs from Trump's latest victims, Rupert Murdoch and The Wall Street Journal. These join a six-lane highway of money flowing to Trump from other dubious directions ranging from bitcoin to bibles. All this accompanies news this week that Trump's former personal attorney and now Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche had a nine-hour talk with Jeffrey Epstein partner and convicted sex trafficker, Ghislaine Maxwell. Was the meeting to get at the truth or to get at Maxwell? Place your bets, but we know that after the interview, with talk of pardon in the air and the DOJ continuing its refusal to release the Epstein files, Maxwell was transferred to a more comfortable minimum-security prison which normally has no room for her kind. Meanwhile, Trump has directed Texas Republicans to try to rig the next congressional election by redrawing the lines for districts in Texas to push Democratic representatives out of the House of Representatives. Texas officials were reluctant, but now they're doing it despite a walkout by local Democratic legislators. Republican Dustin Burrows, Speaker of the Texas House, recently said he's ready to arrest Democrats who stand in their way. But this week in corruption can still end on an economic note. Trump responded to lower-than-expected job numbers by firing for corruption the non-partisan expert in charge of job numbers. This gives him the chance now to hire someone who is actually corrupt and will give him numbers he likes. So, remember, it's not the disappointing job numbers that should upset us. It's not inflation or the tariffs. It's the corruption. It's the corruption. Thomas G. Moukawsher is a former Connecticut complex litigation judge and a former co-chair of the American Bar Association Committee on Employee Benefits. He is the author of the book, The Common Flaw: Needless Complexity in the Courts and 50 Ways to Reduce It. The views expressed in this article are the writer's own.
Yahoo
19 hours ago
- Yahoo
116-space Bradford city centre car park to be sold at auction
A 116-space Council-owned car park in Bradford city centre will go to auction later this month with a £160,000 guide price. The Burnett Street pay and display car park at the top of Little Germany was recently listed as one of the scores of assets that Bradford Council plans to sell in a bid to balance its books. On August 26, the car park will be included as a lot in an online property auction by Pugh. The car park that will go under the hammer (Image: Pugh) The site is one of the larger Council-operated car parks in the city centre, and is next to several of Little Germany's many listed buildings. The listing describes the lot as "a city-centre, freehold plot of land extending to approximately 0.87 acres (0.56 hectares)". The car park that will go under the hammer (Image: T&A) 'The plot is an irregular shape and comprises a hard-standing car park," it adds. 'The plot benefits from road frontage to both Barkerend Road and Shipley Airedale Road (A650), and is located approximately 0.5 miles east of Bradford city centre.' The online auction ends on Wednesday, August 27.