|
8/3/09
|
742 views
Community advocate Penny Dagley chosen as 2009 Gurnee Days Honoree
Penny Dagley doesn’t understand all the fuss. She’s just doing her job, she says. But she’s done that job remarkably well for nearly four decades, and now she has been named the 2009 Gurnee Days Honoree and Parade Marshall of the annual Gurnee Days parade. Dagley will be the guest of honor at the testimonial dinner Aug.13, which will kick off the festivities continuing through Aug. 16.
“Penny may reside in Waukegan but she…lives and breathes for the community of Gurnee,” said Breakfast Exchange Club of Gurnee President Roberta Pfeiffer.
“Mom raised us to believe that everybody has value and everybody can participate,” said Dagley.
Healthy Communities Healthy Youth gives youngsters the chance to do their best, she said. “We have representatives from the township, schools, police, park district, all looking at the needs of our community. And it’s not always about money. It’s also about resources.” For example, a pastor from Joy Lutheran Church in Gurnee had several hundred student backpacks with supplies that his congregation wanted to donate to area families. Dagley said, “It’s a difficult economic time now. There are families in the area who have lost their jobs, or are losing their homes, and they need services they’ve never had to access before.” So, instead of just handing out the backpacks, Dagley helped coordinate a Resource Fair to be held from 4 to 8 p.m. on Aug. 18 in the dance hall at Viking Park in Gurnee for Woodland and District 56 residents.
Dagley also helped found the business education partnership program for students of Woodland School and District 56. “We wanted to work with students whose family members hadn’t attended college and give them a taste of college. We select 50 to 60 students from Woodland and 40 from District 56 and bus them out to College of Lake County and other schools and universities for four days in February and March so they can get an idea of what they want to explore and what goal they might have after high school.” Dagley also works with the Breakfast Exchange Club, which raises funds for organizations that help youngsters needing support systems outside the home. “We have to remember that before kids can come to school ready to learn, they have to be emotionally and socially ready,” she said. Dagley said while she cannot offer statistics on how these programs help families, she knows in her heart that they do. “You see the differences on a daily basis. I’ve worked with kids and celebrate when one day they make eye contact with me or one day when they can walk on their own.” Joy Swoboda, Woodland District 50 superintendent, said Dagley’s ability to create change stems from her abiding and unconditional love of children. “You can see how much she loves children just by watching her,” said Svoboda. Dagley, who is married to Myron Dagley, Director of Prairie Crossing Charter School, has two sons, Matthew and Christopher and a stepson, Michael.
By Sheryl DeVore
Post a comment
You must be logged in to post a comment.
Click here to log in.
|
September 5, 2010
Lindenhurst Health and Fitness Family Day - Bring the kids out to enjoy a great day at the ballpark. Kids can run the bases, play catch and … More
September 6, 2010
Jubilee Days¬ Parade Float Award Ceremony – The theme of this year’s Zion’s Jubilee Days is “Take Me Out to the Ballgame.” In … More
September 7 - 14, 2010
Perform choral masterworks, old and new, traditional and avant-garde with North Shore Choral Society (NSCS) as it celebrates its 75th … More
|