At a special board meeting tonight, the Glen Ellyn District 41 School Board voted 4-1 in favor of going mask-optional, allowing its 3,576 students to attend school for the first time in nearly two years with their faces uncovered.
Syed has lead in Glen Ellyn District 41 with Bruno and Loebach in top 3 Tayyaba Syed is a candidate for the District 41 school board in the April 2021 election. Upper from left, Robert Bruno, Adam Collins, Jodee Dunham, Abigail Emerson and lower from left, Jason Loebach, Chris Martelli, Millie Sessions and Tayyaba Syed are candidates for Glen Ellyn District 41 school board in the April 6, 2021 election. Robert Bruno is a candidate for the District 241 school board in the April 2021 election. Adam Collins is a candidate for the District 41 school board in the April 2021 election. Jodee Dunham is a candidate for the District 200 school board in the April 2021 election.
UpdatedWed, Apr 7, 2021 at 2:48 am CT
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See how the candidates fared in Glen Ellyn s 2021 consolidated election. (Renee Schiavone/Patch)
GLEN ELLYN, IL Mark Senak is projected to win the race for Glen Ellyn Village President, with 100 percent of precincts reporting in Tuesday s general consolidated election. In the race for three open seats on the Glen Ellyn Village Board of Trustees, Civic Betterment Party candidates Gary Fasules, Kelley M. Kalinich and Anne M. Gould emerged the projected winners.
Voters also chose board members for Glen Ellyn School District 41, Glenbard Township High School District 87 and Community Consolidated School District 89.
Glen Ellyn Village President Election Results
School board incumbents fare well in DuPage County in pandemic election Upper from left, Robert Bruno, Adam Collins, Jodee Dunham, Abigail Emerson and lower from left, Jason Loebach, Chris Martelli, Millie Sessions and Tayyaba Syed ran for Glen Ellyn District 41 school board seats in Tuesday s election.
Updated 4/7/2021 8:47 AM
Numerous incumbents in DuPage County s most contentious school board races appeared to hold onto their seats Tuesday, fending off a flood of opposition candidates in an election largely seen as a referendum on COVID-19 restrictions and the pace of reopening classrooms.
Unofficial results indicated voters seemed to favor experience over new blood as many districts shifted to return to in-person learning after spring break while navigating a possible pandemic resurgence in DuPage.