Schools
School Board Candidates In Oak Forest: See Who Is Running
693 candidates filed to run for suburban Cook County school boards. See who is running in Oak Forest school districts.
OAK FOREST, IL — Filing to run for school board in the April 2021 Consolidated Election has closed, with 693 candidates filed to run across Cook County. The candidate filing period ended on Dec. 21.
School board candidates brought their nomination petitions to the Cook County Clerk's office in downtown Chicago, the Elections Operations Center in Cicero and filing centers in Orland Park and Mt. Prospect.
Bremen High School District 228 candidates running in April are Mary List, Larry F. Canning, Evelyn M. Gleaso, Otilla Kelly-Stokes, Marcus Douglas, Joy Hudson and Deborah Stearns.
Find out what's happening in Oak Forestfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Community Consolidated School District 146 candidates that filed include Shane Wilson, Julie Jackson, Vincent J. Aiello, Julie Berry, Patricia Chlada, Richard E Lloyd III and Jill A Dunlap.
Arbor Park School District 145 candidates are Maryann Ing, Tina Moslander, David Rana, Wendy Lux and Candace Smith.
Find out what's happening in Oak Forestfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The Orland Park Civic Center saw the most traffic with 218 candidates submitting their paper work on Dec. 14, followed by Mt. Prospect (140), Cicero (70) and the Cook County Clerk's downtown office (54). A list of candidates who filed paperwork to run in April 2021 can be found on the Cook County Clerk's website.
Historically, most candidates, as they are running for suburban school district seats, file at the suburban locations.
"It is very exciting to see so many people actively participating in the democratic process in their local communities," Cook County Clerk Karen A. Yarbrough said in a news release. "These elections are often overlooked although they have the most impact on our day-to-day lives."
All candidates who were in line by 8 a.m. on Dec. 14 had their papers stamped with that time. If more than one candidate seeking the same office filed at 8 a.m., a lottery will be conducted to determine whose name will appear first on the ballot. Candidates for the same office who filed between 4 and 5 p.m. on Dec. 21, the last day of filing, will also be included in a ballot lottery for the last spot on the ballot. Anyone who filed between 8:01 a.m. on Dec. 14 and 3:59 p.m. on Dec. 21 will be on the ballot in the order they turned in their nomination paperwork.
Candidates for other local jurisdictions, such as municipalities and municipal park and library boards, filed with the district in which they are seeking election.
The Cook County Officers' Electoral Board, which is chaired by the clerk's designee and includes representatives from the State's Attorney and Circuit Court Clerk, oversees objections to school board candidates, in addition to hearing objections to library, police, fire and sanitary district candidacies. Municipal electoral boards hear objections to candidates for suburban municipal offices.
Candidates for other local jurisdictions, such as municipalities and municipal park and library boards, file with the district in which they are seeking election.
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.