Charlotte MacLeay
Charlotte Ely MacLeay passed away peacefully at the McClure Miller Respite House in Colchester, Vt., on April 25, 2021, after a difficult battle with a rapidly progressing dementia. She was a caring and community-minded nurse and educator who deeply loved her family, greatly enjoyed meeting new people, and greeted everyone with a warm and engaging smile.
Born on October 8, 1949, to Robert H. and Loree C. Ely in Brownsville (West Windsor), Vt., Charlotte grew up skiing on Mount Ascutney, where her father designed and cut the trails and was the first to make snow in Vermont. Her love of skiing endured throughout her life, including this past season; she took special pleasure in skiing with her four grandchildren.
Braithwaite, Kelly, Reid Keep Leads In Final Evanston Vote Count
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Braithwaite, Kelly, Reid Keep Leads In Final Evanston Vote Count Patch 1 hr ago Jonah Meadows © Jonah Meadows/Patch Tuesday was the last day for votes to be counted in the April 6, 2021, consolidated elections. The Cook County Clerk s Office plans to certify final results prior to April 27.
EVANSTON, IL Two weeks after last day of voting in the April 6 municipal elections, the Cook County Clerk s Office has released a preliminary final count of ballots, which is scheduled to be certified by Tuesday.
The results (below) show four new aldermen now set to join five incumbents and a new mayor and city clerk next month on the Evanston City Council, with three races decided by fewer than 100 votes.
March 12, 2021
On a December day in 2019, hundreds of Evanston residents sang, cheered and cried together in the pews of the First Church of God in celebration of the first funded Black reparations program in the city â and in American history.
âIt was a special moment for our city,â said Ald. Robin Rue Simmons (5th), who has led city reparations initiatives. âThat meeting was really the convening of what is a lifetime of work ahead of us.â
Evanston City Council had just passed a resolution allocating $10 million dollars over 10 years from cannabis city tax revenue to a Black reparations fund. The legislation was the first in the country â on a local, state or federal level â to commit public funding to reparations for Black Americans. Upon its passage, Evanston garnered national attention for its commitment to addressing over a century of discrimination.
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