Monday, November 21, 2022

DuPage delivers overwhelming victories for the environment in November election

By Linda Sullivan

DuPage voters overwhelmingly voted in November for candidates committed to protecting our environment, our forest preserves, our rights, and our democracy.

River Prairie Group volunteers played an important role in this victory with endorsements, canvasses, and social media. Many members were inspired to write postcards, phonebank, or text bank for environmental candidates.

Starting in April, River Prairie Group’s Political Committee held endorsement interviews with candidates ranging from Congressional to DuPage Forest Preserve commissioners. Some 24 reports were written, 24 votes taken by the RPG Executive Committee, and many presentations to the Illinois Sierra Club Chapter Political Committee. 

Nearly 70 RPG members and 16 candidates participated in RPG’s “Meet the Candidates Night.”  Our members canvassed for Congressional, General Assembly, and Forest Preserve District of DuPage County every weekend, sometimes twice in one weekend, from early September through the weekend before the election.

Partly as a result of all this effort, 22 River Prairie Group endorsements resulted in 21 victories. The importance for the environment and the health of the planet of these victories cannot be overstated. The River Prairie Group helped elect General Assembly incumbents who had stood firm with Sierra Club insisting on a date certain for coal plant closings and environmental justice in Illinois’s landmark Climate and Equitable Jobs Act (CEJA); RPG helped elect two newcomers to the General Assembly who we are sure will be strong allies of the Sierra Club; RPG worked hard to reelect five members of the Forest Preserve Commission, including its president, who together have spent the last four years getting grants to put solar on Forest Preserve buildings and making sure that Willowbrook Wildlife Center’s renovation would be net-zero energy; RPG helped reelect five members of Congress who are leaders in the fight against climate change. 



It is worth noting that DuPage County voters provided climate hero Sean Casten’s margin of victory in Illinois’s hard-fought 6th Congressional District. Whereas the three Chicago wards in the new 6th District voted for Keith Pekau 51% to 49%, DuPage County voters cast their ballots for Casten 58.4% to 41.6%, giving him an overall unofficial win of 54.5% to 45.5%. 



THANK YOU if you voted for Sierra Club endorsed candidates! THANK YOU if you logged on for Meet the Candidates Night. THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU if you spent your weekend and knocked doors, wrote postcards, or text-banked for candidates who protect the planet.

We can’t keep the planet safe without people like you electing leaders who share our environmental commitment. Here is a list of our endorsements:

Statewide      

Governor:                   JB Pritzker (won)

Attorney General:       Kwame Raoul (won)

Treasurer:                   Mike Frerichs (won)

Secretary of State:      Alexi Giannoulias (won)

Workers’ Rights          Vote Yes (passed)

 

Congress

Senate:                        Tammy Duckworth (won)

Representatives:         Delia Ramirez – IL03 (won)

                                    Sean Casten – IL06 (won)

                                    Raja Krishnamoorthi – IL08 (won)

                                    Bill Foster – IL11 (won)

                                    Lauren Underwood – IL14 (won)


Illinois

Senate:                        Laura Ellman  21 (won)

                                    Suzy Glowiak Hilton – 23 (won)

                                    Lauren Nowak – 24 (lost)

                                    Karina Villa – 25 (won)

 

House:                         Janet Yang Rohr – 41 (won)

                                    Terra Costa Howard – 42 (won)

                                    Jenn Ladisch Douglass – 45 (won)

                                    Diane Blair-Sherlock – 46 (won)

                                    Maura Hirschauer – 49 (won)

                                    Anne Stava Murray – 81 (won)

                                    Stephanie Kifowit – 84 (won)

                                    Dagmara Avelar – 85 (won)

 

Forest Preserve District of DuPage

President:                    Daniel Hebreard – President (won)

                                    Marsha Murphy – 1 (won)

                                    Tina Tyson Dunne – 2 (won)

                                    Jeff Gahris – 4 (won)

                                    Barbara O’Meara – 5 (won)

Chatter from the Chair

 By Connie Schmidt

Connie at Morton Arboretum with grandson.
Photo by Mike Schmidt

Whew! The Fall was a blurrrrrrr with phone banking, postcard writing, and campaigning every weekend thanks to the extensive schedule set up by Political Chair, Linda Sullivan, and our effort to help elect environmental champions to represent us from DuPage County. Read on to see our successes in the articles in this newsletter. 

We also had three valuable programs for our membership: CEJA, The Climate and Equitable Jobs Act of IL in September; Local Sustainability from DuPage County and the Forest Preserve District of DuPage in October; and Growing Healthy Foods with three local groups presenting in November. Notes from the efforts in our local government program of October are presented in this newsletter for those of you who missed it. Many thanks to Sheila Rutledge of the DuPage County Board and Daniel Hebreard, president of the Forest Preserve District of DuPage, for presenting this fascinating view of sustainability in our local governments.

We have an article from an amazing multi-day outing to Michigan’s Beaver Island organized by Ed Max and other leaders of the RPG Outings team. FYI – Our outings team is one of the most active in the state! We have well over a dozen certified leaders leading a variety of outings, including day hikes, kayak trips, bike rides, and overnight stays. Check out our calendar for upcoming events that are added each month.

We hope you enjoy the other articles in this newsletter, as well. Now, I really want to talk to you about our group, actually YOUR group, The River Prairie Group of the Sierra Club. We are one of 14 regional groups of Sierra Club in IL. We have an active board of seven elected executive committee members; however, we thrive with our extended volunteer efforts. Our Political Chair, Outings Chair, Conservation Chair, treasurer, and DuPage Monarch Project Chair are not on the elected executive committee, yet they provide very important leadership for our local organization. Each of these areas welcomes new participation and support. If you are feeling (like me) that we must be involved and DO something to help make our local environment a safe and healthy one for our future generations (see my photo above), I hope you will contact me for ideas on how to step into RPG more actively. A simple skill such as helping to do layout for a flyer or sharing information on restoration workdays, can help make our group stronger. I hope you will consider reaching out with your thoughts to grow and share the leadership of our group.  Cschmidt527@gmail.com


Sustainability in DuPage County

By Connie Schmidt

Sustainability is alive and well, and spreading across DuPage County. The October Program for the River Prairie Group hosted leaders from both the county and forest preserve to give an overview of efforts being made to reduce the waste and carbon footprint in DuPage County.  


Sheila Rutledge, the Chair of the DuPage County Environment Committee, shared both her personal goals for initiatives as well as ongoing programs supported by the county. She began with the concern that in unincorporated DuPage, some areas do not have trash haulers, while others may have four to five different companies traveling on the same street. Sheila is working on an ordinance to match what Lake County does and have less truck traffic and consolidate the waste hauling. A postcard campaign is asking for opinions on this idea. In addition, Sheila is working on food composting for the county building. Sheila explained that solar energy is being discussed for a flat building at the county complex. If successful, she thinks this model could be used on several other buildings. The county has a half-million-dollar contract to mow turf along county roads. Sheila is seeking ways to plant natives responsibly to decrease this unnecessary expense. Her other ideas include decreasing the agenda printing and reducing (hopefully eliminating) the use of foam food containers in the county building. She would also like to explore a grant to do buckthorn awareness for removal. This would be a cooperative effort with Forest Preserve District of DuPage County and the Conservation Foundation.

The list of ongoing projects is immense! Many are in cooperation with SCARCE, the environmental organization supported by DuPage County. These projects include electronic and textile recycling, document shredding, and propane tank recycling. Cool DuPage is a sustainability initiative of the county.  It states that 22% of greenhouse gas emissions have been reduced since 2007. Sheila would like to see that figure updated more frequently. The county has a Dark Skies resolution for sustainable outdoor lighting and is part of the Chicago Regional Trees initiative. With Sheila’s support, county-wide initiatives will continue to grow.

Sustainability is basically the motto of the Forest Preserve. Daniel Hebreard, the President of the Forest Preserve District of DuPage, gave an update of efforts by the Forest Preserve District promoting a sustainable environment. He began by explaining that, considering 13% of all DuPage County land is Forest Preserves, only 2 cents of each dollar taxed is needed to support the Forest Preserves, making it a very good deal for quality of life open to all residents. To begin, over the past few years, The Preserve of Oak Meadows Golf Club was not just rebuilt but eliminated one-third of the holes, and now it is a golf course in a preserve with far less turf grass and far more native plantings. Solar was installed on the golf cart storage barn, making it the only fully net zero entity of its type in the country. Public safety and sustainability go hand in hand as the district addresses major projects in their masterplan. For starters, the district installed solar panels on Willowbrook Wildlife Center that covered one-third of the electric needs, and then, private funders offered more, and now we will have 100% clean energy on this building. Amazing! When the remodel is completed, it is expected that Willowbrook will be the first net zero wildlife hospital in the world, with both geothermal and solar energy. 

Dan went on to explain that the fleet management building is powered by solar, which will power electric needs and the solar-charging vehicles. Other vehicles of the district’s award-winning clean fuels fleet are powered by biodiesel fuel, a waste product of soy, not corn. The landfills are producing energy, too, through various projects. They used to haul leachate, a waste product of landfills, but are experimenting with planting specific trees that absorb the fluid safely and help with carbon capture in the atmosphere. The district has recently commissioned a Sustainability, Resilience, and Green Energy Study. This will guide decisions of the future, possibly helping our own Forest Preserve District of DuPage to become the first net-zero agency in the state. Exciting!

A big thank you to both these busy public servants for taking time out of the campaign and work season to come and chat with a large group of Sierra Club folks about what our local governments are doing to help with a clean environment here in DuPage, benefiting all our residents.


Mapping project studies DuPage pollinator habitats

By Lonnie Morris

In 2022, the DuPage Monarch Project and the Forest Preserve District established a Mapping Project with the goal of identifying the areas in preserves with value for pollinators. Diverse data sets were combined to produce scores on the pollinator value of the plants in each ecosystem unit (eco-unit). An eco-unit is defined as a specific type of plant community, such as a wetland, mesic prairie, or upland forest, and there can be several eco-units in each preserve.

Monarch on swamp milkweed. Swamp milkweed provides nectar
for many pollinators and is a larval host for monarch butterflies.
Photo by Jon Yeater.

Andrew Cohen, a DuPage Monarch Project volunteer, developed a Pollinator Habitat Dashboard showing the plants in each eco-unit and their combined value for pollinators. The West Chicago Prairie has the highest-ranking eco-unit for pollinators.

The eco-unit rankings are available for future management decisions in targeting areas for habitat improvements.

The next phase in mapping pollinator habitat will be conducting field observations for verifying the presence of the plants identified with pollinator value.

Please follow the link to view the Mapping Project Presentation, see: here


Sunday, November 20, 2022

Monarch butterfly documentary to screen at the Bloomingdale Public Library

By Lonnie Morris

Plants, Pollinators & Prayers is a recent documentary about a local community's efforts to bring monarch butterflies back to Northern Illinois. Plants, Pollinators & Prayers will have a local screening at 7:00 PM on February 15 at the Bloomingdale Public Library. Registraton is required. Do so here.

Inspired to action by the loss of Midwestern prairie habitat and the decline of the monarch butterfly population, this documentary follows the multi-year efforts of a gardener, educator, and pastor as they transform a rural church’s backyard into a monarch waystation--a sanctuary for pollinating animals, an educational garden for the community, and a sacred space for spiritual contemplation.

Diana Swanson, the gardener who leads the planting of the waystation, was inspired to act because, “The monarch butterfly is just one of the most amazing natural phenomena. It’s one of the earth’s great miracles that this small insect can migrate 3,000 miles or more.”

Peggy Doty, an environmental educator, helps bring awareness to the waystation by raising monarch butterflies in her backyard and says of the waystation, “Who knew that insects could create a destination?” She says that attracting pollinating insects to the local area is imperative because “We won’t be here if they’re not here.”

The monarch waystation featured in the documentary is located at the Mayfield Congregational Church at 28405 Church Rd. in Sycamore, Illinois. Pastor Martha Brunell, a central voice in the documentary, speaks about how projects like the waystation are “where faith communities need to be now, in collaborative efforts with all kinds of different organizations. The things that are important to us we do with educational institutions, commercial enterprises, the highway department, in places where our interests and passions overlap.”

Plants, Pollinators & Prayers is directed and produced by filmmaker and NIU professor Randy Caspersen and was shot over the past five years and crewed with students from NIU's Department of Communication. Since moving to Northern Illinois, Caspersen has made films that showcased the efforts of the Northern Illinois community including the award-winning feature documentary Go Penguins! about the Penguin Project, a local theatre group of young adults and children with disabilities performing the lead roles in a Broadway-style musical. Since its release, Plants, Pollinators & Prayers has screened nationally at film festivals across the United States and Canada.

Admission to the February 15 screening of the documentary at the Bloomingdale Public Library is free. The screening begins at 7:00 PM. The film runs 40 minutes. There will be a Q&A after the screening with the filmmaker, the gardener, and the environmental educator from the documentary.

Exploring Beaver Island

 By Mary L Fox

Traveling from around the southern tip of Lake Michigan, Sierra Club travelers met in Charlevoix, MI, early on September 1, 2022, to catch the Emerald Isle ferry for the 32-mile cruise across Lake Michigan to explore Beaver Island. Ed Max, a horticulturalist and enthusiastic part-time island resident, organized and led this exploratory trip with the assistance of Paul Saindon, Berni Kolasa, Mike Davis, and Jan Bradford.

Despite concerns about seasickness after seeing rough seas and whitecaps on Lake Michigan the day before, the ferry made its way through the harbor channel, and the lake was relatively calm with no whitecaps to be seen. People mingled and got to know each other. One participant shared sweet, juicy Michigan peaches gathered on her way to Charlevoix. Ships were sighted along with several islands. From a distance, the trees from one island created the illusion of a power plant.

As we approached the small harbor at Beaver Island, low-slung clapboard and brick buildings were seen along the main street. Upon arrival, luggage was claimed and loaded into cars. Glad to be able to move around a bit, most folks walked the one-mile route to The Brother’s Place, a quaint rustic inn that would be home base for the next five days. The inn was reminiscent of summer camp, complete with an orientation and delivery of house rules before rooms were assigned. Each room was decorated with a theme – such as the Music Room with instruments, Germany and Paris with travel posters, and Japan with a beautiful fan. The Brother’s Place was once a retreat house for the Christian Brothers, known for their brandy – which is another story. The inn is decorated with vestiges of that history, with lamps and chandeliers made from Christian Brothers brandy bottles. Alas, no full bottles were to be found for sipping.

After settling in and having lunch, we headed out on a short hike through a meadow, to a boardwalk in an old cedar swamp leading to a beach. At the beach, we took off our boots and waded into the beautiful aqua and surprisingly warm waters of Lake Michigan. The water was shallow well past 50 yards out. We returned to the inn to help with dinner preparations or just sit back and relax on the long screened-in porch or in one of the comfortable sitting rooms.

Jan Bradford, dressed in a black chef hat and apron, was chef extraordinaire, providing tasty menus of classic favorites, including made-from-scratch blueberry pancakes, egg-in-a-hole, and Jell-o cheesecake pies, to name a few. Group members pitched in with meal preparation and clean-up. Lunch fixings of bread, cheese, meat, peanut butter and jelly, along with granola bars, cookies, and chips were set out after breakfast to make individualized sack lunches before setting out for the day’s activities.

Highlights of the trip were trail talks by local experts and stargazing. On Saturday, Ed showed us one of his favorite hikes through old growth forests and varying vegetative zones ending at a rocky beach known as French Bay. At a pond along the way, we met Pam, a fourth-generation islander, who gave a brief history of Beaver Island. Out of a total of 34,000 islands, it is the largest island in Lake Michigan at 56 square miles, and one of 24 islands on the Great Lakes with permanent communities. Pam stated that Beaver Island has the distinction of being a UNESCO Bio Reserve. During the hike, she pointed out ancient trees and provided fun facts, such as a turtle’s sex is determined by whether the egg was in sun or shade at the time of conception.

We were also joined by Gina, a mycologist (a fungi foraging expert), who showed the group edible mushrooms she had gathered and described how she planned to prepare them. She also cautioned that many mushrooms are poisonous, and foraging requires education and guidance. Foraging is both art and science, and what you don’t know can make you very sick or kill you. Yipes! After that rousing talk, some of the group enjoyed a fun bumpy and dusty ride to the trailhead on Gina’s ATV.

While exploring the rocky beach at French Bay, Paul Saindon found a gneiss (pronounced “nice”) rock on the beach. You may be wondering what a gneiss rock is. That evening, our very own geologist, Mike Davis, entertained us with a geology lesson. Beaver Island and others in Lake Michigan are the result of a band of resistant bedrock which caused glaciers to deposit enough sediment to form the island. Gneiss is a metamorphic rock with bands or striations of different compositions layered over time. This rock has a line along where the bands were displaced and indicate that it was once part of a large mass of rock involved in an earthquake much earlier in the earth’s history. The rock, known as a glacial erratic, arrived at the island via an ice-age glacier from the Canadian Shield, the area of ancient exposed igneous and metamorphic rock located mainly in Canada.

On Saturday morning, the group hiked through a cathedral of trees opening to the blue sky and sun high above a stand of birch and other hardwood trees. The group saw a full spider web hanging from one of the trees and a carpet of lime green moss and hidden fabulous fungi. The sunlight created a kaleidoscope of green ranging from pale sage lichens to emerald green moss in between the waist high deep blue-green ferns. The ground beneath our feet, a combination of pine needles, decaying leaves and sand, was spongy soft and cushy reminding me of a bouncy house. In the afternoon, people had the choice of walking along the somewhat rocky beach at Donegal Bay or climbing the heights of the Mt. Pisgah sand dune. While not nearly as high as Mt. Pisgah in the Appalachian Mountains, it proved to be a challenging climb. After the hikes, some headed into the small town near the harbor to visit Mary’s Toy Store, a combination of toy museum and art gallery and the Beaver Island Historical Society to learn about the island’s colorful and varied history.

On Saturday night the group enjoyed some amazing stargazing at Sand Point with local astronomers providing a hilarious commentary on where the best location would be to see the aurora borealis. One man responded in a deep, raspy baritone, “I asked myself that question, and I haven’t yet received an answer,” and so this conversation continued a bit. The moon was almost full, and when it set, Jupiter and Saturn were visible to the naked eye. Jupiter’s four moons and Saturn’s rings were visible through a telescope. The local astronomers were more than willing to share their knowledge and allow Sierra Club visitors to look through their telescopes. The Aurora Borealis (Northern Lights) were on display. With some adjustments to his cellphone camera, Steve Turner captured some spectacular images that the naked eye could not see.  

On Sunday, the group headed to Ed’s home either by kayak across a lake or by foot past the proverbial fork in the road marked by a human-sized dinner fork. We enjoyed drinks, appetizers, and dinner while sitting on the deck overlooking one of the inland lakes. The evening culminated with seeing a loon family swimming on another lake as the sun set. This is the night when we longed for some full bottles of the famous Christian Brothers brandy to take the chill off.

Monday, the group visited the cabin and tomb of Feodar Protar, one of the Island’s most beloved citizens from 1893 until his death in 1925. He was highly respected and renowned for providing healthcare and sharing his knowledge, gained mostly through self-education and observation, to the community. An informational marker at his home displays the circular calendar he created to mark the seasons with notes and cut-out magazine pictures on planting and harvesting. 

The group then hiked along the Kuebler Trail, developed along an old logging rail line. Some of the participants ended the day with a visit to a local watering hole to sample the unique and refreshing local brews.

On Tuesday morning, everyone quickly packed up, ate breakfast, made lunch, cleaned up the kitchen, and caught the ferry back to Charlevoix. As the ferry approached the harbor, three wave runners approached and began jumping the wake of the ferry. Some of the riders shot up almost vertically in the air as they jumped the wake. It was quite a spectacle and entertaining end of our Beaver Island adventure!

Monday, August 22, 2022

Vote Like the Fate of Earth Depends On It!

 By Linda Sullivan

Did you vote for Sierra Club endorsed candidates in 2020? 

If you did, you made it possible for DuPage legislators Terra Costa Howard, Anne Stava Murray, Laura Ellman, Suzy Glowiak, Maura Hirschauer, and Karina Villa to pass a nation-leading climate change law, the Clean and Equitable Jobs Act. Your vote made it possible for them to pass laws regulating coal ash pollution that is contaminating Lake Michigan and drinking water throughout the state, a ban on burning the cancer-causing forever chemical PFAS, and so much more.

If you voted for Sierra Club endorsed candidates, you helped US Congressman Sean Casten get around the stymied Congress and Senate by using the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to promote wind energy and use the military appropriation budget and the budget reconciliation bill to quietly accomplish parts of Biden’s climate agenda that were stalled in the Build Back Better bill.

Or you helped Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi to work across the aisle as cochair of the House Solar Energy Committee with a cochair who is a bedrock conservative from South Carolina to persuade climate skeptics to pass laws promoting solar energy. The importance of Krishnamoorthi’s remarkable ability to talk to conservatives cannot be overstated.

Or you helped Congressman Bill Foster get 75 percent federal funding for the Brandon Road project needed to stop Asian carp from entering Lake Michigan and use his background as a scientist to advance battery storage technology and fund the next generation of clean energy technology.

If you voted for our endorsed candidates, you helped elect DuPage Forest Preserve Commissioners Jeff Gahris and Tina Tyson-Dunne. They have formed an important part of the nucleus that has brought energy sustainability to the Forest preserves, as well as adding miles of trails and amenities for residents of DuPage County to enjoy. 

Your vote matters! These environmental champions won because people like you voted for them, and they are making a difference.

The 2022 election needs you. You can find Illinois Sierra Club’s 2022 endorsed candidates by clicking https://www.sierraclub.org/illinois/2022 . You can find Sierra Club’s Congressional endorsements at https://www.sierraclubindependentaction.org/endorsements

Hiking McHenry County in July

By Marlene Bertolozzi

Photos taken by author.

Having spent a lot of time hiking suburban Chicago, I was surprised to find there are hidden charms scattered around McHenry County. On July 7, we hiked through Pleasant Valley Conservation Area with its somewhat steep forest trails, a small lake, and rolling meadows. 


On July 17 we hiked Marengo Ridge Conservation Area, a favorite of mine. When you arrive, you’ll find spread out before you a panoramic view of summer flowers – bee balm, black-eyed Susan, compass plants, and in the distance the Marengo Ridge stretching across the horizon. In fact, once you know what you are looking at, you can see it as you exit I-90 at Route 23. 


The trails meander through the meadows and then cross over to the woodlands. Flowers everywhere. I have never experienced flowers in the summer in Illinois before. The county also provides a few not very well-kept informational signs, such as the history of wild turkey in the area and a description of the moraine and ridge that make up the area. And to top it all off, beautiful, sunny weather graced our days. Hope to see you on one of these hikes soon!





Sunday, August 21, 2022

If You Build It, They Will Come

By Bruce Blake, DuPage Monarch Project, Garden Specialist 

Photos by Bruce Blake

One of the environmental programs the Sierra Club, River Prairie Group, belongs to is the DuPage Monarch Project - https://dupagemonarchs.com. Founded and chaired by Lonnie Morris, the Project is a cooperation among several groups: Forest Preserve District of DuPage County, The Conservation Foundation, Wild Ones-Greater DuPage, and many other municipalities and park districts. Our main purpose is to provide education and to promote increasing Monarch butterflies and their habitat in DuPage County. 

As you may know, Monarch butterflies have been put on the IUCN list as endangered. The IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature) is a membership Union of government and civil society organizations that work together to advance sustainable development and create a just world that values and conserves nature. Monarch populations have declined by over 80% in the last 20 years. There have been many factors. The large-scale use of herbicides that destroy milkweed - the monarch caterpillar’s sole host plant and only food source during its caterpillar stage - is a driver of the butterfly’s decline. The butterflies are also threatened by neonicotinoid insecticides, fungicides, and other chemicals that are toxic to young caterpillars. Climate change has also affected the migration of monarchs from Mexico. Butterflies, as well as bees and other pollinators, are needed in our food chain. One out of every three bites of food we eat requires pollination!

One of the groups we have partnered with is Immigrant Solidarity DuPageThe Monarch is a very important part of Mexican culture. The return of the Monarchs to their overwintering spot in Michoacan, Mexico, is a special festival. It symbolizes the return of the dead. Working together, we have planted several Monarch pollinator gardens.

One of these is at St. Andrew Lutheran Church in West Chicago. Cristobal Cavazos, of Immigrant Solidarity, talked to Pastor Josh Ebener about doing a Monarch garden on a grass area south of the church. We developed a landscaping plan and presented it to the church. With their approval, we started. The area was roughly 40 feet by 120 feet. We needed to get rid of the sod. We tried covering the grass with tarps over the winter, but that didn’t kill the grass as hoped. We really didn’t want to herbicide. After a long time looking for someone who could remove the top 2 inches of sod so we could plant, we found a local landscaper, Daniel Fuenteswho volunteered to remove the sod and help us with the stonework for the pathway.

Removing the sod.

This was early 2021. After removing the sod, we had 40,000 lbs. of crushed stone ordered for the path foundation. Unfortunately, we couldn’t dump it where we were working, so we had to dump it on the parking lot and use a small trailer to spread it by hand. 

Preparing the path.

Once we had the path outlined, we hand sowed a native seed mix. It was a combination of many different native flowering plants to provide nectar, several types of milkweed, and a variety of tall grasses. All the plants are native to our area. They will provide nectar and a place for butterflies to lay eggs. A large portion of the seeds were collected and donated by members of Wild Ones-Dupage. We put in over 1,200 plants by hand. This was fall 2021.

We have the best volunteers to help us! Many people helped plant, work on the pathway, and weed. Our thanks to Miguel Romero, Mateo Suarez, Robert Cook, Andrew Van Gorp, Gabriela Hernandez Chico, Rafael Vieyra, Cristobal Cavazos, Rocio Hernadez, Patricia and Marti Landry, and Bob Sherman.  Hayley Hawkinson joined us from the West Chicago Garden Club. Without their support and hard work, we couldn’t have accomplished this. The brick pathway is an amazing design and is yet to be finished. The center will have a butterfly done in tile, by a local artist.     

We couldn’t wait for spring 2022 to come! At first, a few plants were coming up, but they were very sparse.

Garden weeding..

It looked promising, but not as many as we hoped for. During the spring and summer of 2022, we worked on the pathway, pulled weeds, and added more native plants. Slowly, the plants took root and flourished. It was amazing how the area filled in.


Finished brickwork and growing plants. 

It will take several years for some of the plants to flower. We need to find volunteers who can help us maintain this beautiful native Pollinator Garden. If you would like to be part of bringing nature back to us, you can reach me at Rllnstns1@aol.com to help.

Looking Back on Recent Progress for Monarchs in DuPage

 By Lonnie Morris

It’s September and the super generation of monarch butterflies is beginning its journey south for the winter.  It’s sometimes called the Methuselah generation because monarchs born in late summer live from September to March, the time needed to migrate thousands of miles to Mexico, then rest for a few months before beginning the trip north in spring.

This is the time for the last monarch sighting of the season. You can see them searching for nectar, riding the wind south, or roosting at night. As the butterflies leave Illinois, let’s take a moment to look back on how their summer stay in DuPage has been made safer and healthier over the past seven years.

Photo by Lonnie Morris

In 2015, DuPage Monarch Project began with a group of concerned volunteers ready to take action to protect monarchs and pollinators. They knew something serious was happening, and local solutions were needed.

It was the same year the population of eastern migrating monarch butterflies was measured at 1.13 hectares. This was an increase from the previous year but still one of the lowest numbers ever recorded. The Center for Biological Diversity had only months earlier filed a petition to protect monarchs as a “threatened” species. They were threatened by a loss of habitat, exposure to pesticides, and more frequently occurring extreme weather events produced by climate change.

The DMP founders adopted engagement, education, and support of new and enhanced healthy habitat as the best approach for saving monarchs. Engagement extended awareness throughout the entire county from Naperville to Elmhurst, education provided the foundation for informed decisions--both needed for more habitat to happen.

In the past seven years, 27 park districts and municipalities have signed resolutions of commitment to providing new or enhanced monarch habitat, and 11 groups became DMP associate members. Their combined efforts have added hundreds of acres of natural areas on public land, along with improving parking lot islands, detention basins, sidewalk planters, and gardens with native species.

Monarch butterflies were woven into West Chicago’s identity and culture through murals, hosting documentary viewings, sponsoring public art exhibits, and planting a garden in the shape of a butterfly. 

West Chicago’s Year of the Butterfly and Elmhurst Cool Cities Coalition’s Start in Your Yard campaign fostered awareness of the importance of biodiversity. Westmont’s No Mow till Mother’s Day launched a new appreciation for how a small change in lawn care can make a major difference for bees. It continues to spark conversations and inspire other communities to offer residents a No Mow May option. Gardens and lawns are now being seen in a new light, as both beautiful and a place where bees and butterflies can thrive.

All of this came about from the dedication of DuPage Monarch Project’s board members and volunteers, many of whom are working quietly behind the scenes. It’s time to give them a shout out and say thanks for making DuPage a haven for monarch butterflies.


DuPage Monarch Project Board

Anamari Dorgan - Director of Community Engagement Services, Forest Preserve District DuPage County

Connie Schmidt - Chair, River Prairie Group of the Illinois Sierra Club

Jim Kleinwachter - Conservation@Home, The Conservation Foundation

Jeanette Goodlow – Membership and Outreach Chair, Wild Ones Greater DuPage

DuPage Monarch Project Volunteers

Bruce Blake - Garden Specialist DMP, Prairie Wind Native Plants: Native American Plants for Home Gardens

Karen Brittain - Volunteer

Andres Ortega - Science Consultant DMP, Ecologist, FPD

Jill Spealman - Educator DMP, Naturalist

Kim White - Educator DMP, Natural Naturalist


Is your community or organization a member of DuPage Monarch Project? Check here

Email dupagemonarchs@gmail.com to learn more about joining.


DuPage Air Monitoring Project

 By Jeff Gahris

Air pollution in the United States has been a vexing problem since the EPA was established in 1970. We have seen a substantial improvement in air quality overall, but there are still localized areas where issues persist. Often these are in environmental justice communities.

Can it be that we have this problem in DuPage County? To answer this question the River Prairie Group obtained a portable air sensor to evaluate neighborhood air quality, thanks to a grant from the Illinois Chapter of the Sierra Club’s Conservation Committee.

The Airbeam3 detects small respirable air particles, and is very sensitive at detecting diesel exhaust from train locomotives and vehicles such as trucks. It is not suitable for measuring other pollutants of concern such as formaldehyde, benzene or ethylene oxide that may be present in a given community. Where it shines is in its portability. We can use it in neighborhoods where there are no stationary monitors, thereby finding places that may not be adequately monitored for air quality.

It also appears to be accurate when compared to monitors used by Illinois EPA’s air monitoring network.

We are looking for opportunities to use the sensor in order to document communities experiencing to excessive particulate pollutants. We can loan it out to community groups for this purpose. To learn more, send an email to Jeff Gahris at jgahris@gmail.com. Our goal – healthy air for everyone!

Thursday, August 18, 2022

RPG Water Monitoring Project

By Kathleen Fischer

For more than 20 years, Sierra Club River Monitoring Project volunteers have sampled and tested local streams in DuPage County. Currently, three sites on the West Branch of the DuPage River, four sites on the East Branch, two sites on Salt Creek, and four Forest Preserve lakes are sampled and tested periodically throughout the year. This means that volunteer water collectors travel to the sites early in the morning, regardless of the weather, and lower a bucket into the water to retrieve a sample to deliver for testing by volunteer water analysts.

Water collection tools ready for early morning samplng
at Hidden Lake Forest Preserve near Lombard
Photo by Water Collector Caroline Teeter
Testing reveals nutrient levels (phosphate, nitrate, and ammonium), as well as other important values (pH, chloride content, and, at select sites, dissolved oxygen levels). All of these indicators can be tracked over time and downstream to monitor the health of the stream for fish and other living creatures. Beside local impacts, the monitoring results are a guide to evaluating the potential contribution of DuPage County streams to the health of the Des Plaines River, and ultimately the Illinois River, the Mississippi River, and the nearshore waters of the Gulf of Mexico.

Over time, this monitoring also can reveal the impacts of urban development (roads, subdivisions, shopping malls, dam building and channel rerouting for flood control, etc.) and practices such as road salting and fertilization of crops and lawns. Sierra Club volunteer water collectors and testers contribute data that otherwise might not be available to the public through its webpage for easy access by citizens, scientists, municipalities, and state and federal agencies. For more details, see river monitoring project  and the links found under “River Monitoring Project” in the menu bar.

Many thanks to these Water Warriors for DuPage County:  

Bob Barbieri

Bruce Beiersdorf

Lynn and Mark Berndt

Mary Ann Ciesla

John Cooper

Patti & Kevin Clower

Joe Dick

Kathleen Fischer

Alison LaBarge

Jill Spealman

Caroline Teter

Judy Toth

Linda Volin

Lisa Warren

Dave Wilderman


Sunday, May 15, 2022

Chatter From the Chair

 By Connie Schmidt

It takes about a month for us to get the newsletter articles collected and edited, and several rounds of proofreading and layout before it hits your inbox. MUCH gratitude goes to our committee of several Ex-Com members who brainstorm the subjects, Sherry Stratton our editor, Jeff Gahris our layout editor, and Peter Chung, Chapter staff, who sends it along to you. I mention this because the photo included here is from the MONTH-long Earth Day celebrations in April (yes, old news), but boy, RPG was EVERYWHERE! We spread the word at SCARCE, several Park District celebrations, Forest Preserve Events, you name it. It was great to see the interest in our work regarding clean energy, stream monitoring, election endorsements, informative programs, and one favorite topic, increasing and preserving healthy habitats for all creatures, especially our pollinators, with news of the DuPage Monarch Project.

One facet of our River Prairie Group work, purposefully not mentioned in the list above, is our restoration work at Glacial Ridge Forest Preserve in Glen Ellyn. I didn’t list it because I wanted this opportunity to encourage you to read the article in this issue on the amazing work Bruce Blake is doing at this special location.

Many of us watched our lawns grow during May in uneven tufts with mini flowers tucked between blades of grass. Well, that is because Lonnie Morris, our incredible volunteer coordinator of the DuPage Monarch Project, alerted us to the benefits of “No Mow May” (or at the very least, as far into May as you dare go) so that early emerging pollinators have something to munch on as the flowers in our gardens ramp up later in the month. The DuPage Monarch Project is doing so very much, and in this newsletter issue there are several articles to share with you. Their website is a must, and I encourage you to check it out.

It really does impress me the variety of information we gather for you in each newsletter. Also, here you can check out a featured outing by experienced leader and naturalist Ed Max, learn how our Forest Preserve District of DuPage is being inclusive in creating a Kayak accessibility ramp in Blackwell Forest Preserve, be reminded of the very important movement for Dark Skies highlighted in an article contributed by Glen Ellyn activist Adam Kreuzer, and more--much more! 

So please now relax, enjoy the lovely summer months, and rest up thoroughly because this fall, we will be working diligently for the candidates we have endorsed who are committed to policies that protect our environment for all creatures. More on that in our Fall issue, or reach out to me personally.

Friday, May 13, 2022

Every Day Needs a (Dark) Night

By Adam Kreuzer


We sometimes forget that every day has a night! Unfortunately, because of the recent explosion of light pollution, our nights are now bright. Until only about 50 to 60 years ago, we had dark nights. Our grandparents and their parents walked summer nights under thousands of bright stars. Now, on the best of nights, we can see with our naked eyes not more than 40 stars. While we have adjusted somewhat to this very recent dramatic change in our environment, our birds and other wildlife friends have not.

For birds, the new widespread use of bright white LED lights at night is especially troublesome during migration. Twice a year, during spring and fall, millions of birds migrate through our area. Unfortunately, according to Cornell Lab of Ornithology, the Chicago area is the #1 most hazardous location in the U.S. for migrating birds. In addition to how buildings are built, artificial light at night is a significant cause of bird fatalities. Every year, an estimated 600 million birds die from building collisions.

The great majority of birds migrate at night. During the day, they eat to fuel their trip. At night, fueled to fly all night, some birds become distracted by bright white lights. They descend from the sky and strike lighted windows. Some fly in circles, tire, and fall on the sidewalks. In Chicago, volunteers with the Chicago Bird Collision Monitors wake early every morning to rescue injured birds. Survivors are taken to the Willowbrook Wildlife Center in Glen Ellyn. A recent 20-year study of bird fatalities at McCormick Place conducted through the Field Museum concluded that by turning off just half of the lighted windows during migration, fatal bird collisions dropped by 60%.

Bright white lights at night affect most nocturnal animals, including nocturnal pollinators. Moths, which at night pollinate flowering and fruiting plants, circle bright white lights until they are eaten or tire and die. Fireflies, which rely on their bioluminescence to find mates, are less plentiful now.  Recent research has shown that bright white LED lights, when shining into our bedroom windows, can also have an impact on human health by affecting our circadian rhythm. We sleep less and eat more. As a result, we suffer physically and mentally.

Every day needs a dark night! Fortunately, there are four easy things we can do at home to help our planet at night. Who knows, if we do these things, maybe we can see a few more stars…and fireflies!

ACTIONS YOU CAN TAKE

Flip the switch. Consider turning off outdoor lights before you go to bed. If security is a concern, turn off all but the truly necessary light(s). If available, use a motion sensor. You will save $$ and will use less fossil fuel.

Shield, shield, shield. Consider installing fully shielded outdoor fixtures that keep your light on your property instead of on your neighbor’s house or into our night sky. The International Dark Sky Association website www.darksky.org will direct you to hundreds of locally available fixtures.

Please avoid using “bright white” or “daylight” bulbs. Instead, use a more amber color, not more than 2700Kelvin. “Soft white” bulbs are 2700Kelvin.

Not so bright! LED lights are much more intense than the bulbs we once used. With your “soft white” bulb, consider using fewer watts (40, not more than 60) or lumens (450 or less). An Earth-friendly bulb, if on, is shielded fully, is less white, and is less bright.

- Adam Keuzer is an International Dark Sky Association Delegate. He provided the photos for this article.