Shooting in St. Paul apartment building leads to SWAT team response

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A shooting in a St. Paul apartment building led to a SWAT team response early Monday.

Officers responded to a report of a shooting just after 3 a.m. in the Payne-Phalen neighborhood. They found a man in a building in the 1100 block of Westminster Street who was shot in the back, said Sgt. Mike Ernster, a St. Paul police spokesman.

Paramedics took the man to Regions Hospital with possible life-threatening injuries, according to Ernster.

Police searched for a suspect and the department’s SWAT team responded to the apartment building, making announcements for a person to exit. The team searched the building and didn’t find a suspect, Ernster said.

No one was under arrest as of Monday morning.

“We do not believe this is a random incident and the investigation is active and ongoing,” Ernster said.

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The Booksellers’ Revolt

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January 17 was a big day for opponents of book bans in Texas schools. Charley Rejsek, CEO of indie bookstore BookPeople, had just returned home from a routine meeting at the Austin Central Library. She opened her email and screamed with joy: The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals had ruled in her favor in BookPeople v. Wong, a challenge to Texas’ Restricting Explicit and Adult-Designated Educational Resources (READER) Act. 

“READER had felt like a death sentence,” Rejsek said. “With the ruling, BookPeople and all book vendors can continue to service school districts the way they always have. … The judges agreed with the unconstitutionality of the law as written. That’s validating.” 

The decision came in the nick of time: Signed into law in June 2023, the READER Act would have barred booksellers from conducting business with Texas’ K–12 libraries if they hadn’t first identified whether the books they were selling were “sexually explicit,” “sexually graphic,” or had “no rating.” By April 1, booksellers would have also had to identify every explicit book they had ever sold to any Texas school district that was still “in active use” by that district. Vendors were to submit these ratings to the Texas Education Agency (TEA), which could override them. Noncompliance ran the risk of placement on a list of unapproved vendors. Many bookstores derive significant income from school sales, and the thin-margin and often resource-strapped indies incapable of complying would have had to rethink their businesses, if not shutter entirely. 

Opponents of the law, which was coauthored by state Representative Jared Patterson, of Frisco, lambasted it as a draconian effort to censor primarily LGBTQ+ authors, characters, and subjects. READER would harm booksellers’ bottom line, its terms were unconstitutionally vague, and forcing vendors to rate books is compelled speech, critics said.

To the relief of booksellers and freedom-to-read advocates, the 5th Circuit—often considered one of the nation’s most conservative—upheld a lower court’s temporary injunction against the ratings mandate, finding that it would harm vendors economically and constituted compelled speech. 

“We are not persuaded by the State’s characterization of the ratings as a ‘form of consistency review’ that is a ‘purely ministerial task’ instead of an expression of the vendors’ opinion on the subject matter being rated,” the opinion read. “[This] statute requires vendors to undertake a fact-intensive process of weighing and balancing factors to rate library material. This process is highly discretionary and is neither precise nor certain.”

Soon after the decision, Patterson called on Attorney General Ken Paxton to appeal the decision to the Supreme Court. Texas has 75 days from February 1 to do so. Plaintiffs could seek a decision from the district court to make the temporary injunction upheld by the 5th Circuit permanent, but had not settled on a course of action as of press time. 

Texas has a long history of book censorship dating back to the McCarthy era, the publication of Henry Miller’s Tropic of Capricorn mid-century, and several Daughters of the Republic battles against both “obscene” dictionary entries and critical views of Texas history in the 1960s. But aside from a short-lived crusade against Harry Potter’s witchy influence in the late ’90s and early aughts, the conversation around books—and possible legislative policing—had been tame since the 1980s. That shifted near the turn of this decade. 

A literary hysteria started brewing at least as early as 2021. In July of that year, the Texas State Preservation Board—a body helmed by Governor Greg Abbott and Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick—unilaterally canceled a Writers’ League of Texas event at the Bob Bullock Texas State History Museum that would have featured the authors of Forget the Alamo, a book critical of the state’s origin story. 

“As a member of the Preservation Board, I told staff to cancel this event as soon as I found out about it,” Patrick wrote on X, formerly Twitter. “This fact-free rewriting of TX history has no place [at the museum].”

“Librarians are being harassed in private Facebook groups. They’re receiving pressure from within and outside the school.”

In October, state Representative Matt Krause disseminated a list of 850 books he wanted public school districts to review “for the welfare and protection of state citizens.” The list prompted one district to pull at least 125 titles. In March 2022, Llano County officials fired a librarian who refused to remove materials deemed objectionable by a group of people who said some of the library’s books—including one featuring a transgender teen—were “inappropriate” or “pornographic.”

Few, however, have been under siege like the state’s public school librarians.

A report from PEN America, a longstanding free speech advocacy group that has tracked book challenges since 2021, paints a grim picture. During the 2021–2022 school year, parents, educators, administrators, board members, or legislators challenged more than 1,500 books that were either included in curricula or placed in school libraries in districts across the country. A sizable number of those books contained “protagonists or prominent secondary characters of color,” according to the report, or addressed LGBTQ+ themes. A quarter of the challenges involved books having “sexual content of varying kinds,” though much of this was age-appropriate material about puberty or relationships. More than 800 of the total challenges PEN indexed in 2021–2022 originated in Texas. In the 2019–2020 school year, that number was 17, according to the Texas ACLU’s own figure.

Texas’ school librarians didn’t need a report to tell them they were being targeted. 

“[Librarians] are being harassed in private Facebook groups,” said veteran Texas librarian Carolyn Foote, who in 2021 founded #FReadom Fighters, an advocacy group. “They’re receiving pressure from within [and outside] the school, and they’re really just trying to comply with . . . the standards for library operations that have been around for so long.”

The standards she refers to are decades-long best practices laid out by the American Library Association and similar groups that incorporated guidelines about  books deemed “obscene” by courts. The same guidelines have also long encouraged community and family involvement in library collections. But the reason school librarians now “operate from a place of fear,” as Foote put it, stems from a change in the culture. 

“A [Trump] presidency where anything goes as far as the way you treat people with differing ideas . . .  created this climate where people felt more aggrieved and more permitted to act however they wanted, with no sort of social norms,” Foote said.

Foote said that greater diversity—and openness about diversity—has stoked fear among many Texans. In recent years, the state’s decision-makers have crusaded against everything from drag shows and diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs at universities to the teaching of Texas history. The “Texas 1836 Project,” for instance—its title based on the New York Times’s 1619 Project, which stressed the role of slavery in America’s founding—was established by legislators in 2021 to “never forget why Texas became so exceptional in the first place.” 

Another reason: a vocal minority with the power to drum up fear. Far fewer people increasingly account for a far greater number of challenges. The Washington Post found that of 1,000 nationwide book challenges, 60 percent had been filed by a mere 11 people. Lawmakers have also taken the lead in censoring books: PEN’s 2021–2022 report noted that more than 40 percent of challenged titles that school year were “tied to directives from state officials or elected lawmakers to investigate or remove books in schools.”

Something else had changed, too: Historically, book challenges were quiet, deliberate, local affairs, involving formal procedures and committee reviews. Books suspected to be objectionable remained on shelves until a final decision. Now, challenges that lead to books being pulled are quick, loud, ideologically driven, and often centered on select passages divorced from context. Many books are being yanked from shelves immediately upon being challenged.

The road to meddling in private booksellers’ affairs began in August 2022, when Patterson boasted of having challenged 32 books in his home school district of Frisco due to “obscene content,” but lamented that the responsibility had fallen on state officials.

“National ratings groups, publishers, and book vendors . . . continue to highly rate, award and promote graphically explicit content produced in recent years,” he said in a statement.

Six months later, Patterson would up the ante.

The first draft of House Bill 900—the tendentiously named Restricting Explicit and Adult-Designated Educational Resources, or READER, Act—was introduced in March 2023. Coauthored by Patterson, READER outlined two separate but related provisions. The first instructed the Texas State Library and Archives Commission (TSLAC) to adopt “standards for school library collection development that a school district shall adhere to in developing or implementing the district’s library collection development policies” by January 1, 2024. Standards included recognizing parental involvement in curation, providing transparency into school libraries’ current catalogs, outlining and publicizing district-level book-challenge-review processes, and barring books deemed patently obscene and age-inappropriate based on longstanding precedent. 

The second component compelled booksellers to rate “sexually explicit” or “sexually relevant” titles that they had previously sold to public K–12 schools and submit a list of those titles to the TEA. The overlap between these two primary components was the bookseller ratings—librarians were to refer to them when developing their collections. 

Lawmakers were convinced that the law would banish “any communication, language, or material, including a written description, illustration, photographic image, video image, or audio file, other than library material directly related to the curriculum . . . that describes, depicts, or portrays sexual conduct . . . in a way that is patently offensive” from school libraries.

The law was to take effect September 1, 2023, and vendors were expected to submit their first rounds of ratings by April 1. Those ratings—or a notice of vendors’ failure to proffer them—would afterward be posted in a “conspicuous place” on the Texas Education Agency’s website. 

Illustration by Ivan Armando Flores

The state’s leading librarians and their advocates were, if not thrilled, at least more sanguine about many of Texas’s statewide standards for developing their collections. Though READER would have marked the first time the state had codified such standards statewide, many of the bill’s goals were familiar, already de rigueur to experienced librarians.  

But advocates feared that the primacy READER placed on parental involvement would lead families to believe they were newly armed with rights they had already possessed, leading to further and more uninformed assaults on beleaguered librarians. What’s more, though the bill’s insistence that districts clarify challenge-review processes sounded fine on paper, those processes—formerly collaborative and orderly—might easily be revised by ideologically driven decision-makers.

But most troublesome to advocates was the ratings regime READER established, which required school librarians to ban any book that vendors had rated as explicit—or, more accurately, the books the TEA considered as such. Librarians recognized, too, what booksellers knew as a matter of fact: Rating thousands of books would be highly subjective and time-consuming. 

BookPeople’s Charley Rejsek knew something was cooking in the Lege in early 2023. A fellow Texas bookseller had alerted her to one of the 39 library regulation bills introduced that year—a nearly tenfold increase beyond the usual number. It was not until March 7, however, when Patterson filed HB 900, that the stakes were immediately clear.

“The goal [with HB 900] was to put this workload onto bookstores,” Rejsek said. “It’s so impractical.”

Rejsek has been a bookseller for more than 25 years. I first met her in 2017, when she was serving as the logistics and volunteer coordinator at Texas Book Festival. Three years later, she was named BookPeople’s new CEO. Soon after, her duties ballooned beyond the managerial. 

“I did not think that this would ever be something I would have to do on behalf of booksellers,” she told me, “but I also knew that the bill wasn’t feasible. … I had no choice. It’s my job [as] a bookseller to say why it’s not going to work.”

A substantial portion of BookPeople’s business is made up of school sales, and the burden of READER’s ratings system was untenable. Rejsek took the issue up with the education committee as well as House Speaker Dade Phelan. 

“We went to everyone we could think of,” Rejsek said. “We went in person; we emailed them; we [showed them how] we would never be able to comply.”

The shops I spoke with could barely begin to wrap their heads around READER’s potential impact on their operations and bottom lines. Will Evans, founder of Deep Vellum Bookstore in Dallas, characterized the bill as “ill-conceived and hateful to its core.” While his shop doesn’t rely on school sales to the same degree as others, the new law would change how the store functions. 

“It would hurt our business,” he told me. “Would we have to cut employees? Probably.”

Randi Null, the general manager of Houston’s Brazos Bookstore, explained that because so much of her shop’s marketing efforts are tied to school-sponsored book fairs, author visits, and classroom libraries, the financial loss stemming from READER would be devastating. She was sure of at least one thing, however: The Brazos employee charged with purchasing children’s books for the store would quit under the weight of it all.

In May 2023, weeks after the House had given HB 900 the thumbs-up, Rejsek testified before the Texas Senate Committee on Education. READER had yet to pass the Senate, and she was trying once more to convince lawmakers. 

“This bill would require us to retroactively report every book ever purchased from us at the bookstore registers, or at a festival, or an author event, or any other public setting that may have been brought for circulation into a school,” she said, her voice trembling. “This is not possible. We have never been required to keep these records, and we do not have a way to create them. Due to the lack of records, it would be impossible for us to rate all books we may have sold that are in active circulation after 52 years of business.”

After Rejsek spoke, a BookPeople colleague painted a picture of a new and near-Orwellian day-to-day: “This could mean entry-level cashiers asking every customer in the store the intended purpose of their purchase, evaluating, questioning, and tracking it.”

If small booksellers incapable of READER compliance were cut out, only a few big players would remain to satisfy school libraries’ collection needs. The fewer the players, the simpler it would be for the state to manage and dictate the terms of lucrative and massive bulk-order book buys with those mega vendors willing to dispense with principle and play the game. The result: an ever narrower catalog of government-approved books channeled into school libraries.

Speculation and fear were all that Texas’ booksellers had left. Despite Rejsek’s plea, the Senate stamped READER with approval two weeks after her testimony, and Abbott signed it into law that June.

Though officially READER wouldn’t take effect until September, the Houston area’s Katy Independent School District—having already dictated that students must have parents’ permission before checking out any book at its school libraries—decided in a preemptive huff to halt all new book purchases. 

With the die cast, TSLAC had little choice but to begin drafting new collection-development standards for Texas’s K–12 schools. The state’s booksellers, for their part, could do little. But Rejsek wouldn’t throw in the towel. 

In late July, BookPeople joined forces with Valerie Koehler of Houston’s Blue Willow Bookshop as well as the Association of American Publishers, the Author’s Guild, the American Booksellers Association, and other national organizations in filing suit against the state over the READER Act. 

Amicus briefs supporting the plaintiffs illuminated READER’s economic impact on booksellers. Blue Willow, for instance, derived 20 percent of its sales from school-related functions and, with total annual revenue just north of $1 million, might have to shutter if compelled to rate every book they’d already sold to schools. Compliance would cost them between $200 and $1,000 per book for a total between $4 million and $500 million. 

On September 19, in a scathing 59-page opinion, U.S. District Judge Alan Albright wrote, “READER’s requirements for vendors are so numerous and onerous as to call into question whether the legislature believed any third party could possibly comply.”

Albright halted the enforcement of READER’s bookseller ratings while leaving TSLAC’s school library collection-development standards intact. A week after the judge’s ruling, Texas appealed the decision to the U.S. 5th Circuit, which—in a temporary win for the state—denied Albright’s injunction and expedited a schedule for oral arguments. Meantime, the state could proceed as planned. 

At oral arguments in November, Laura Lee Prather, the plaintiffs’ lead attorney, outlined the consequences of a READER future.  

“It is important to stress that unless the injunction is continued and the administrative stay is lifted, irreparable injury in the form of lost First Amendment rights will ensue,” Prather said. “In the absence of an injunction, the financial, reputational, and constitutional effects of the required ratings will be irreversible. Even if HB 900 is ultimately overturned, this bell cannot be unrung.”

In January, after the 5th Circuit at last ruled in BookPeople’s favor, I asked a relieved Charley Rejsek about what her attorney had said.

“I hope that we stopped it early enough,” she said, “so that if there were any damage, it could be undone.” 

“Once your name is on a website with ratings that you don’t agree with,” she went on, “you can’t take it back.”

In an X post, State Republican Executive Committee member Christin Bentley—long an outspoken proponent of READER—decried the triumph of the “groomers” and assured everyone, “In the months leading up to the 89th Texas Legislative Session, we have good work ahead of us and a clear path ahead.” 

She signed off: “The enemy would have you defeated and discouraged. Don’t be! The enemy is a liar! Victory is the Lord’s!”

“There is a climate of fear and uncertainty, and librarians feel like their jobs are being threatened.”

Like Bentley, Patterson looked forward to new opportunities to stick it to booksellers: “In the meantime, [I] look forward on how Texas can improve vendor accountability with other legislative solutions next session,” he said.

Rejsek’s attention turned to librarians. The vendors had secured a victory, but “the librarians are still fighting.” 

Though a win for booksellers, the 5th Circuit’s ruling had indeed sidelined the library standards portion of HB 900, just as the district court had. 

“Only the rating system affects Plaintiffs,” the circuit court’s opinion read, and “the library standards are not at issue on appeal.”

The Texas Library Association (TLA) lauded the appeals court’s decision but lamented the standards left in place.

“There’s really just a lot of uncertainty [now],” the TLA’s Shirley Robinson told me. 

Carolyn Foote for #FReadom Fighters agreed: “[The new standards are] creating a lot of confusion,” she said. Because TSLAC’s recently adopted standards included the now-defunct provisions about vendor ratings, they were “impossible to comply with.”

Whatever the ultimate outcome of the legislative and legal wrangling, READER has already had a chilling effect on school libraries and librarians who censor themselves to avoid trouble. 

“There is a climate of fear and uncertainty, and librarians feel like their jobs are being threatened,” Robinson said. “They are responding in ways that may even be contrary to their training and not ordering certain books or [shelving them] because they’re afraid of who’s going to walk into the library and turn something into a weapon against them.”

I asked Rejsek, who in December was named, along with Blue Willow Bookshop’s Koehler, as Publishers Weekly’s person of the year in recognition of their stands against book banning, what to make of the future.

“I think this is just the beginning,” Rejsek said. “All over the country, they’re throwing something at the wall, and they’re getting it into the courts, and they’re seeing what sticks.”

“It’s a really scary time,” Robinson added.

Chicago Bears working on a deal to hire Shane Waldron as their new offensive coordinator

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The Chicago Bears are working on a deal to hire Shane Waldron as their new offensive coordinator, multiple league sources confirmed Monday morning.

Waldron has been the Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator for the last three seasons and helped quarterback Geno Smith to a comeback season in 2022. Before that, Waldron spent four seasons with the Los Angeles Rams as the passing game coordinator, quarterbacks coach and tight ends coach.

He is well-respected inside league circles as a young, energetic coach on the rise and a strong teacher with a creative mind and — especially important to the Bears — three seasons of play-calling experience.

NFL Network first reported the Bears are planning to hire Waldron.

The Bears reportedly interviewed at least nine candidates for the opening, including San Francisco 49ers passing game coordinator Klint Kubiak, former Baltimore Ravens offensive coordinator Greg Roman, former Carolina Panthers offensive coordinator Thomas Brown and former Arizona Cardinals head coach Kliff Kingsbury.

Waldron would replace Luke Getsy, whom coach Matt Eberflus fired earlier this month after two seasons at the helm of the Bears offense. In the search for Getsy’s replacement, Eberflus emphasized his desire to find a new offensive coordinator who is a “great teacher.”

“That’s important because you know he has to coach the coaches to coach the position, and I think that’s the No. 1 trait of any great coach,” Eberflus said. “You have to be able to have the innovation to really look at the players you have and be able to help enhance and put those guys in position to succeed and to get explosive (plays) and to move the ball down the field.”

Waldron would take over a Bears offense that has major decisions ahead this offseason at quarterback. General manager Ryan Poles must decide whether to use the No. 1 draft pick to select a quarterback — potentially USC’s Caleb Williams — or to stick with Justin Fields, the Bears starter for the last three seasons.

Poles said he expected to ask candidates for their plans to coach different kinds of quarterbacks.

“I love it because what are you going to do for these four different types of quarterbacks,” Poles said. “I want to hear that, and I think it’s really important to hear the versatility and adaptability in their teaching, in the way they implement a plan, scheme, adjust. It actually makes it pretty dynamic in terms of the interview process.”

Waldron called plays in 2021 for a Seahawks offense piloted by Russell Wilson. In 2022, after Wilson was traded to the Denver Broncos, the Seahawks pivoted to Smith and won nine games while earning a wild-card berth.

Smith, in his 10th NFL season, was honored as the league’s Comeback Player of the Year after throwing for 4,282 yards and 30 touchdowns. Both marks would be single-season franchise records for the Bears.

This season the Seahawks ranked 21st in total offense (322.9 yards per game) and 14th in passing (230 ypg). They averaged 21.4 points, ranked 17th. That was down from 2022, when they averaged 351.5 yards (13th) and 23.9 points (ninth).

The Seahawks staff is looking for new jobs after the organization and coach Pete Carroll parted ways after a 14-year union.

In addition to working closely with Wilson and Smith, Waldron worked with quarterback Jared Goff for three seasons with the Rams.

Waldron served as an offensive assistant with the New England Patriots (2008-09) and Washington (2016) and worked in operations with the Patriots early in his career. He also has coached in college, high school and the UFL.

Waldron and the Bears must hire assistants to coach the quarterbacks, wide receivers and running backs after the team dismissed Andrew Janocko, Tyke Tolbert and Omar Young earlier this month. Offensive line coach Chris Morgan and tight ends coach Jim Dray remain on the staff.

The Bears also are seeking a defensive coordinator, and NFL Network reported Monday they will interview Tennessee Titans defensive pass game coordinator Chris Harris. Harris played safety in the NFL for eight seasons, including two stints with the Bears, and started for the 2006 Bears team that went to the Super Bowl.

More Bears news

Bears Q&A: Did GM Ryan Poles miss a chance at a big-name coach? How desirable are the coordinator openings?
Column: Keeping Jaylon Johnson is paramount for the Bears — but will they make him the NFL’s highest-paid cornerback?
5 player decisions besides QB facing the Bears, including Jaylon Johnson’s contract and Darnell Mooney’s future
Bears GM Ryan Poles staying ‘open-minded’ as he evaluates whether to keep Justin Fields or draft a QB at No. 1
Caleb Williams declares for the NFL draft — and the Bears, picking No. 1, ‘can’t be scared of the unknown,’ analyst says
Column: How can GM Ryan Poles fix the cycle that has plagued the Bears forever? Pick the right quarterback.
Bears President Kevin Warren says building a ‘magnificent’ downtown stadium remains a possibility

Around the Southland: Bears mascot delights students in Tinley Park, RomCon returns in Oak Lawn, more

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Bears mascot delights students in Tinley Park

A special friend stopped by last week at the Lt. Joseph P. Kennedy School for Exceptional Children in Tinley Park to help everyone shake off the winter blues.

Staley Da Bear, the official team mascot for the Chicago Bears, danced his way through a crowd of cheering students and staff, exchanging high fives with a multitude of raised hands.

“You ready to have a dance party?” his handler asked above the roar. “Let’s go!”

School administrators invited Staley to stop by the school to help motivate students as they settle into the second half of the school year.

About 70 students attend the therapeutic day school, including students from Thornton Township District 205, Thornton Fractional District 215, Plainfield Community Consolidated School District 202, Crete Monee District 201-U, Consolidated High School District 230 and Flossmoor District 161.

Oak Lawn library, Tinley book store reunite for RomCon

Fans of romantic literature will be swooning Feb. 17 as the Oak Lawn Public Library presents RomCon, an afternoon event dedicated to the genre. Independent bookstore Love’s Sweet Arrow, in Tinley Park, is teaming up with librarians to produce the free mini-convention featuring eight romance authors along with book signing, author panels, raffles, trivia and book sales.

Love’s Sweet Arrow owner Rosanne Backlin recruited a diverse group of authors to visit the library, including Danielle Jackson, Kelly Farmer, Tinia Montford, Tamara Jerée, Rien Gray, Hanna Earnest and Sara Fujimura. Author Olivia Dade will be doing a virtual visit to the event.

Dade, who lives in Sweden, is the author of Avon bestsellers “Ship Wrecked” (2022) and “Spoiler Alert” (2020) and she has a new novel coming out, “At First Spite” in 2024. Bettcher says,

“It’s a really big deal for us to have her participate in RomCon,” said fiction librarian Emily Bettcher.

Oak Lawn’s RomCon is from 1 to 4:15 p.m. Feb. 17 from 1-4:15 p.m. Register in advance for updates and a special treat on the day, at 708-422-4990 or cal.olpl.org/event/10993047.

Hidden Oaks Nature Center to close for most of 2024

The Forest Preserves of Will County’s Hidden Oaks Nature Center, 419 Trout Farm Road, Bolingbrook is about to be transformed, but the process will require the facility to be closed for most of the year starting Feb. 19.

FPD officials said Hidden Oaks Preserve also will close on occasion for outdoor renovations during the year, as necessary, but the renovations will not affect Hidden Lakes Trout Farm, which is in the northern part of the preserve.

The interior and exterior work at Hidden Oaks Nature Center is designed to convert the former Bolingbrook Park District site, which was purchased by the Forest Preserve in February 2022, into a nature center tailored to Forest Preserve-type exhibits and activities.

Officials said the renovation will provide new design features throughout the first floor and a new permanent live animal tank for the nature center’s resident turtles, and an elaborate indoor bird-watching lookout deck will be installed.

Oak Forest High School earns diversity award

Oak Forest High School has earned the College Board AP Computer Science Female Diversity Award for achieving high female representation in AP Computer Science A. Schools honored with the AP Computer Science Female Diversity Award have expanded girls’ access in AP computer science courses, according to a news release from the School District 228.

Oak Forest High School was one of 225 institutions in the country recognized in the category.

“We are so proud of the unique perspective our female students bring to the fields of Math and Science,” said Oak Forest principal Jane Dempsey. “This is a recognition of our belief that anyone can succeed in any field. Our graduates are a testament to the impact created by opening doors to women.”

Oak Forest Raiders chosen to lead Fleadh

The Oak Forest Raiders instructional tackle football and cheerleading program for boys and girls ages 5 to 14, which has been operating in the area for more than 50 years, was chosen as grand marshals for the 15th anniversary edition of the Oak Forest Fleadh.

Players, families and coaches will lead the parade, which steps off at 11 a.m. March 2 at 151st and Central Avenue and heads to the Oak Forest Park District. The parade will be preceded at 8:30 a.m. by the CNB Oak Forest Fleadh 5K race, which starts and finishes at 155th Street and Betty Anne Lane. More than 500 people are expected to participate. Activities also are planned before and after the race at Fire Station 1, 5620 Jame Drive. Street closures are planned for the race and for the parade. More information is at www.oak‐forest.org.

Visitor’s Bureau video highlights Southland attractions

The Chicago Southland Convention & Visitors Bureau has launched its interactive destination video for visitors’ vacation and residents’ staycation ideas.

The video displays footage of Chicago Southland amenities with their corresponding logo and website link synced on the side of the screen. Users can also scroll through the vertical list of all amenities in descending order of appearance.

“This interactive video helps our tourists and residents peruse and visit many of Chicago Southland attractions in one source,” said Jim Garrett, president/CEO of the bureau. “The video includes nature centers, art galleries, restaurants, breweries, museums, sports facilities, golf courses, and performing arts centers to name a few.”

The CSCVB interactive video is available at www.visitchicagosouthland.com/#clicktivated.