Benton High School Alum Bradley Phillips sprints towards success

Bradley Phillips, center, is all grins as he signs his letter of intent to run track with Missouri Baptist University. (RLC public information photo)

INA – Bradley Phillips has something to prove.

Simply put, Phillips wants to prove he’s fast. But, there is so much more to it than that.

A high school track sprinter at Benton Consolidated High School, Phillips was a member of both the 4×100 and 4×400 meter relay teams that smoked the previous school records.

“The 4×4 relay, we broke the record at state. We qualified at sectionals by running a 3:26. At state, we were seeded second. At state we ran a 3:22.85, and I believe that broke the school record by just under two seconds,” Phillips explained.

In spite of his success, Phillips received no offers to run at the college level. It was something that shook his belief in himself.

But, this is a young man who is no stranger to adversity.

When he was eight, he was riding his bike when he hit a hole in his yard. The handlebar struck Phillips in the rib, breaking it and sending the bone though his lung and into his liver. He had internal bleeding and a collapsed lung.

“I remember crawling up to the back door because I couldn’t walk. My sister was screaming and crying. They had to put a tube in me to re-inflate my lung and another to get rid of all the fluids.”

He survived the encounter and overcame a number of personal issues to find success. He wasn’t about to let this newest development derail him.

So, with track out of the question, he changed gears and set his sights on his degree.

“My plan was to go to SIU. So, I applied there. But, before the semester started, I had a change of heart. I decided to go to community college and save some money,” Phillips explained. “So, I called and withdrew from my classes. They told me it was all taken care of, and I started to come here to Rend Lake.”

It came as a shock when almost a year later he received a letter for SIU saying that he owed the college thousands of dollars for classes he never attended.

“I thought I was going to have to drop out of school here. There was no way I was going to be able to pay that. I was afraid a collection agency would try to take my car away or something like that.”

Luckily, Phillips had someone in his corner. Actually, a group of someones, the RLC STARS Program, a group of dedicated individuals devoted to student support.

RLC’s STARS Program is a Student Support Services grant, funded by the U.S. Department of Education as a component of TRIO. It is designed to help eligible Rend Lake College students make the most of their college years by offering the advisement and academic support that may be needed to successfully complete a college degree and transfer to a four-year university. The STARS Program assists 160 Rend Lake College students each year.

“It took a lot of paperwork to prove I wasn’t there. I had to get my work stubs. There was a petition that I had to fill out. Leah [Stallman, TRIO Director] helped me navigate the whole thing. Without that help, I’m not sure what would have happened. That almost stopped me from going to college,” Phillips expressed.

“It’s like a little group of family. Amy [Cook] is like my mom. Jessica [Phillips] and Leah are like my aunts. Everyone over there is just so cool. Deidra [Traylor] and Marcia [Whitehead] are great. Everyone over there is just so friendly and helpful.”

Phillips credits STARS with being one of the reasons he is even still at college. Everything from transportation issues to food to a friendly ear, he says they are more than just college employees. He calls them his family.

With his academic life sorted back out, Phillips couldn’t shake his other passion, improving in the gym. But, without a track program at RLC, the runner began focusing on building muscle.

Instead of preparing for the next race, he was set on working out “to get big.”

“I was just a typical gym dude,” he said with a shrug. “I spent a lot of time in the gym.

Again, someone stepped up to help him get back on track. Coach Aron Kays, his former assistant track coach at BCHS, contacted Phillips and encouraged him to start running again and compete independently.

“Coach Kays saw something in me though. I wasn’t a very good athlete when I was little. I was scrawny, but I wanted to get better. I had a lot of drive. I wasn’t going to quit. I was always trying to learn more and figure things out. I was the guy who was always putting in work in the offseason. I buckled down and started really eating right and putting in more time than everyone else.”

“At that point, he had more faith in me than I had faith in myself,” Philips said.

So, at his coach’s urging, Phillips took to the track again. In his first meet back, he put up a time comparable with any of his races during his senior year. He hadn’t lost a step.

“I came out, trained hard for three weeks and ran a really good time. There was no reason to just keep trying. I proved to myself that I could do it.”

Little did Phillips know at the time, but his decision to start competing again would change his life.

During a competition at Illinois College in Jacksonville, Ill., Phillips raced against Missouri Baptist University (MOBAP) standout and RLC alum Robert Grinder.

All Phillips was hoping for was to compete with Grinder. He ended up leading some of the race and earning the attention of his competitor.

“He ended up beating me by a few hundredths of a second. He won conference at MOBAP. So, he’s a really great sprinter. So, after the race, Robert came back to me and gave me a high five. He told me good race and then introduced me to his coach, Mark Sissom.”

Phillips hit it off with the coaching staff at MOBAP and started communicating with the team.

All the hard work culminated last month when Phillips singed his letter of intent to run for Missouri Baptist starting in the fall, complete with an academic scholarship.

“This scholarship is a big deal,” he said grinning.

“I know I wasn’t born with athletic talent. I’ve had to really work hard to get where I am. I have been extremely lucky to have some fantastic people around me. Without people like Coach Kays or STARS, I wouldn’t have gotten here either. So, I want to win every time I complete. I want to represent this area and the people who put their faith in me,” he expressed.

Originally, Phillips wanted to study Physical Therapy. His obsession with improving athletically led him to put a lot of time and effort into studying what would help make him a better runner. But, during his time at RLC, he switched goals. Now, he’s hoping to become a math teacher.

Phillips enjoys mathematics. While running doesn’t come easy for him, numbers do. Plus, his entire life has been shaped and molded by the teachers who were there for him while he was growing up.

Phillips will graduate with his RLC degree in a few short weeks thanks in no small part to the STARS team and the generosity of Rend Lake College Foundation donors who provided one of the academic scholarships that Phillips was able to earn during his time in Ina.

So here, at the starting line of the next big chapter in his life, Phillips knows what he’s running for. Now, it’s more than just competing. It’s proving the trials and tribulations didn’t slow him down. It’s proving that he believes in himself as much as those around him do. It’s proving that he can be more than fast. It’s about proving he can be the best, both on and off the track.

Sesser-Valier registers 28 seniors during College Signing Day

Pictured:  FRONT ROW, FROM LEFT, Adrianna Fedderke, Katie King, Jaycee Garner, Emily Kovarik, Allyson Bryant, Elizabeth Crawford, Daisy Ort, Katie Robinson, and Haley Miller; MIDDLE ROW, Matthew Le Vault, Dailyn Noble, Desiree Pavletich, Paolina Marlo, Jenna Jones, Ashley Baxter, Alexis Swift, Alayna Hicks, Ellie Hattendorf, Brooke DeAngelo, Madison Baine, Katelynn Baine, and Gabrielle Garrison; BACK ROW, Billy Heard, Preston Launius, Josh Womak, Bryce Jones, Colton Brown, and Lukas Gunter. (ReAnne Palmer – RLC Public Information

By ReAnne Palmer 

Twenty-eight seniors at Sesser-Valier High School officially became Rend Lake College students this week during College Signing Days.  The students took their first steps into life after high school by meeting with an RLC Academic Adviser to enroll in summer and fall courses.

Registration for Summer and Fall 2018 classes at RLC is going on now. Classes start the week of June 4-8 for the summer semester and during the week of August 20-24 for the fall semester. Contact RLC’s Academic Advisement Center at 618-437-5321, Ext. 1266 to schedule an appointment for summer or fall registration.

OJT

That’s what they used to call it: on-the-job training. In the professional discipline of architecture, it was common for people to become architects by being an apprentice in an architectural office. After 12 years of apprenticeship, a candidate could sit for a state licensing examination—on-the-job training leading to professional certification.

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Over time, a combination of formal education and apprenticeship became the norm. Currently a professional degree, typically a Master of Architecture and two years of internship experience (aka apprenticeship) followed by an examination, is required. This hand-in-glove relationship between formal education and on-the-job training is a powerful one-two punch to prepare people for productive careers in fields ranging from architecture to zoology.   Internships and apprenticeships, mandatory or voluntary, paid or unpaid, are important topics of discussion on many university campuses – including what components make internships most valuable.

The combination of formal training with internships in contrast to a more traditional apprenticeship with little classroom exposure is growing. In 2014, President Obama wanted apprenticeships to grow 100% in five years so that by 2019 there would be 750,000 apprentices. President Trump has also authorized a $200 million increase to apprenticeship programs. This issue is nonpartisan and originates from skilled worker shortages nationwide, especially in the fields of construction, healthcare and information technology. The distinction between skilled worker and manager is diminishing. Rather than white or blue collar, light blue is becoming the destination color.

Many college students say hands-on work is “very” satisfying. The intellectual ability to identify, diagnose and solve problems comes in many forms and is in high demand.  Inspired education and training allows students to gain experience applicable in any setting. Joseph E. Aoun, in Robot-Proof: Higher Education in the Age of Artificial Intelligence, says that anyone who creates a new “thing” or process becomes invaluable in the marketplace as well as “robot-proof.”

Internships and apprenticeships create appreciation for the consequence of a hierarchy.  Organizations are not flat, pancake-like structures. Not everyone is equal. Operational workplaces have workers and decision makers functioning with different roles dispersed throughout. In addition, both up and down the chains of command, accountability and effectiveness flow in both directions. This may be the most important lesson that anyone learns in any work setting. Unlike a college classroom, which is a pancake-like structure where all students are equal and guided by a single faculty member, the workplace demands complex interdependencies. Effective leaders and workers understand this interdependency as necessary to accomplish goals. In formal educational settings, the abilities and accomplishments of an individual are typically elevated above collaboration, as they should be. This makes the combination of the workplace and the schoolhouse powerful.

The apprenticeship model, with indentured servitude mindsets embedded in history, is just that—a historical artifact. Apprentices were functionally important and produced goods or services of value. Today, too many internships rely on and count shadowing, watching and observation as “work.” Such experiences do provide insight and knowledge, but very little experience with the real responsibility for the production of goods, ideas or services; in a word—work. Room to Grow: Identifying New Frontiers for Apprenticeship, from Burning Glass Technologies reinforces the impact of apprenticeships and their contribution to individuals and industries.

Effective universities build more opportunities to incorporate on-the-job training in both apprenticeship and internship settings as a pedagogical extension of the classroom. All areas of study would benefit from a model of internship/apprenticeship that combines learning and doing. Providing enough mentors and meaningful experiences for students to bridge the gap between learning about something and working is a challenge.

Many institutions and corporations provide unpaid internships, which seem to be a “win-win” situation. However, the model falls short because of the old adage, “You don’t value what you don’t pay for.” An unpaid worker, not to be confused with a volunteer (another subject altogether), provides questionable value to both the individual and the organization beyond networking—important for sure but not a substitute for work.

There is little, serious argument about whether or not either of these experiences contribute to positive knowledge and insights and future employment. One study at Southwestern University showed that 13% of the students engaged in internships were more likely to find employment. One in three of the students engaged in internships were “very happy” with the experience. In the African-American and Latino student populations, over 70% of the students were so positive regarding work experiences as part of the curriculum that they believed on-the-job training should be required. These observations were from a survey of 50,000 college students and graduates.

Internships and apprenticeships have amplified value when the student is engaged in real work that depends on and grows from the classroom learning experience at the university. Benefit is chrome plated when there is tangible output from the labor. That is what people should mean when they say on-the-job training.

Franklin County Farm Bureau News

From Franklin County Farm Bureau Manager, Gay Bowlin

BENTON – Spring is coming – but not soon enough – with the cold and some snow this past weekend it seems like it will take forever for warm weather to get here. Before long we will be seeing combines on the roads and I want to make sure that everyone remembers that they are Slow Moving Vehicles and to Share the Roadways.

Also, another reminder is to NOT text and drive – whether you are in a car, truck, tractor or combine it is illegal and dangerous. SAFETY IS OUR MAIN CONCERN.

Identity theft topped the list of consumer complaints filed to the Illinois Attorney General’s office in 2017. Most of the 2,500 complaints involved the unauthorized usage of credit cards through cyber-attacks. Just be careful when ordering online and/or giving your credit card information out.

COUNTRY Financial Representatives in West Frankfort – Adrienne Mason and Gavin Suver – had a pancake breakfast last Saturday at their new location in the VF Factory Mall. They asked Franklin County Young Leaders and Franklin County 4-H members to come in a help serve and clean up. The pancake breakfast was free but they received donations for both of these groups. The money that will be given to the Young Leaders will help on Scholarships this year. We want to thank Adrienne and Gavin for their support.

Franklin County Young Leaders Pork Loin Sale

JUST IN TIME FOR EASTER DINNER

FRANKLIN COUNTY FARM BUREAU YOUNG LEADERS

ARE TAKING ORDERS FOR SMOKED PORK LOIN.

READY FOR PICK-UP ON MARCH 28 & 29 –

½ LOIN – $35             FULL LOIN – $50

SEE A FCFB YOUNG LEADER OR CALL (618) 435-3616

Orders must be in by March 21

(ALL PROFIT WILL BE USED FOR COUNTY SCHOLARSHIPS)

The Foundation Scholarship and the Young Leaders Scholarships are available to anyone attending a post-secondary school to study in an agriculture related field.  All applicants must be a resident of Illinois and must be a Franklin County Farm Bureau Member or dependent in good standing.

The Foundation and the Young Leaders will both award scholarships based on: Academic performance and honors, rank in class, ACT/SAT score, community involvement, demonstrating an interest in agriculture and/or agribusiness, character and personality, maturity, intellectual interest, moral character and demonstration of leadership skills.

Applications must be returned to the Franklin County Farm Bureau no later than April 5, 2018 to be eligible for consideration for the 2018 scholarships.

Applications are available now and can be picked up the at the Franklin County Farm Bureau Building at 1210 Highway 14 West in Benton send to you by email. Call the office at (618) 435-3616 if you have any questions.

Franklin County Ag in the Classroom (AITC) has been very busy helping to promote the IL Reads Book Festival held on March 10th, 2018 at the DuQuoin High School in Perry County.  The Franklin County AITC Coordinator, Melissa Lamczyk, gave away one book to every school district in Franklin County.  A box was placed in each school district for teachers to enter their name in the drawing.  The drawing was for one of the highlighted books, “Popcorn Astronauts”, at the book festival.

A book was given to Akin Grade School 5th Grade, St John’s Catholic School in West Frankfort Pre-K, Denning Kindergarten in West Frankfort, Ewing Grade School Kindergarten, Thompsonville Christian Junior Academy, Sesser-Valier Grade School, Thompsonville Grade School and to Christopher and Zeigler Libraries.

Remember we are farmers working together. If we can help let us know.

Illinois Surpasses Old Peak Employment Level

Illinois Unemployment Rate Dips in January

 

CHICAGO–The Illinois Department of Employment Security (IDES) announced today that the unemployment rate decreased by -0.1 percentage point to 4.8 percent in January and nonfarm payrolls increased by +200 jobs over-the-month, based on preliminary data provided by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and released by IDES. December jobs were revised down to show a slight drop (-700 jobs) rather than a slight gain as initially reported (+1,500 jobs).

Today’s report incorporates annual benchmark revisions for nonfarm payrolls as well as labor force statistics. Nonfarm payrolls were revised slightly higher for 2016 and 2017. The revised December 2015-2016 growth is now +0.6% and the revised December 2016-2017 growth is now +0.7% (pre-benchmark these were +0.3% and +0.5%, respectively). Revisions to labor force statistics resulted in a slightly higher labor force participation rate, employment participation rate and unemployment rate for calendar year 2017.

The revised nonfarm payroll figures revealed that Illinois surpassed its prior business cycle peak from September 2000 level in June 2017. In January 2018, Illinois nonfarm payrolls are at a new high; 0.4% above the prior peak.

“Illinois job growth over the past year has been spurred by a resurgence in manufacturing.” said IDES Director Jeff Mays. “Over the year, manufacturing payrolls accounted for close to half of the total increase of jobs in Illinois.”

“This new peak employment milestone is a testament to the work that has been done by the Rauner Administration to encourage competition, create jobs and reduce burdensome bureaucracy,” said Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity Director Sean McCarthy. “Just last week, our state was named in the top three for site selection and our strengths within identified industries, like manufacturing, are elevating our efforts to attract investment to Illinois. It has never been more clear to employers across the world that Illinois is open for business.”

In January, the three industry sectors with the largest gains in employment were: Leisure and Hospitality (+4,000); Education and Health Services (+1,700); and Financial Activities (+1,300). The three industry sectors with the largest payroll declines were: Trade, Transportation & Utilities (-2,100); Professional & Business Services (-1,800); and Construction (-1,100).
Over-the-year, nonfarm payroll employment increased by +47,100 jobs with the largest gains in these industry sectors in January: Manufacturing (+20,200); Leisure and Hospitality (+13,900); and Education and Health Services (+6,200). The industry sectors with the largest over-the-year declines include: Information Services (-3,400); Trade, Transportation and Utilities (-3,300); and Other Services (-400). Illinois nonfarm payrolls were up +0.8 percent over-the-year in sharp contrast to the nation’s +1.5 percent over-the-year gain in January.

The state’s unemployment rate is +0.7 percentage points higher than the national unemployment rate reported for January 2018, which held at 4.1 percent. The Illinois unemployment rate is down -0.4 percentage points from a year ago when it was 5.2 percent. The Illinois jobless rate last stood at 4.8 percent in May 2007.

The number of unemployed workers dipped -2.1 percent from the prior month to 311,500, down -8.5 percent over the same month for the prior year. The labor force decreased -0.1 percent over-the-month and also over the prior year. The unemployment rate identifies those individuals who are out of work and are seeking employment.

An individual who exhausts or is ineligible for benefits is still reflected in the unemployment rate if they actively seek work. To help connect jobseekers to employers who are hiring, IDES’ maintains the state’s largest job search engine, IllinoisJoblink.com (IJL), which recently showed 63,832 posted resumes with 185,983 jobs available.

Franklin County Sheriffs Office Arrest Report

BENTON –  Franklin County Sheriff Donald R. Jones has reported the following incidents/arrests:

The Public is reminded the alleged are presumed innocent, until proven guilty in a court of law.
2-25-18 at 5:39 pm Deputies responded to a domestic dispute in Logan. The investigation resulted in the arrest of Jimmy D. Hosick age 62 of Logan for domestic battery.
3-2-18 at 11:22 pm Deputies responded to a single vehicle traffic crash on Winery Road and Country Club Road. A 2003 Chevrolet Blazer driven by Harry T. Melvin age 16 of West Frankfort was traveling south bound on Winery Road and failed to stop at the intersection with Country Club Road. The Blazer impacted a ditch and then a fence on Country Club property. There were no injuries and the driver was cited for failure to reduce speed to avoid a traffic crash.
3-5-18 at 12:00 pm Deputies arrested Jared C. Laroe age 34 of Sesser for violating the Illinois Sex Offender Registration Act.
3-6-18 at 8:35 am Deputies responded to Zeigler-Royalton grade school in response to an alleged threat of violence toward students by a male student. The investigation resulted in the arrest of a 12 year old male for disorderly conduct. The juvenile was not detained. He was released to his family’s custody.
3-7-18 at 12:08 pm a traffic stop in Benton resulted in the arrest of Garrett H. Beasley age 38 of Royalton for driving while license suspended.
3-8-18 at 2:00 pm a traffic stop in Benton resulted in the arrest of Harli R. Rhine age 25 of Ewing for driving while license suspended.
3-8-18 at 4:00 pm Deputies arrested John A. Sutton age 29 of Coello. This arrest is the result of the investigation of an incident that was reported by the Village of Coello on February 23rd, 2018 in which a water meter had been damaged and the theft of 27,900 gallons of water had occurred. Sutton is in the Franklin County Jail charged with criminal damage to government supported property and unlawful interference with a public utility.
3-8-18 at 4:35 pm Deputies arrested Kristian S. Johnson age 24 of Christopher as the result of an incident that occurred in Benton. She has been charged with criminal trespass to a residence with people present, obstructing justice and a warrant for failure to appear on traffic charges.
3-8-18 at 8:30 pm Deputies responded to a domestic dispute in rural Valier. The investigation resulted in the arrest of Kolytn W. Irvin age 28 of Benton for unlawful violation of an order of protection.
WARRANT ARRESTS
2-23-18 Samuel L. Sweet age 24 of Thompsonville. Failure to appear on no valid F.O.I.D. card.
2-24-18 Makenzie L. Gibson age 21 of Dixon. Failure to appear for unlawful consumption of alcohol.
2-26-18 Leroy W. Hasenjaeger age 39 of West Frankfort. Unlawful violation of an order of protection.
2-27-18 Jacob A. Pfeiler age 33 of Benton. Failure to appear on methamphetamine related charges.
2-27-18 Joshua R. Parker age 28 of Zeigler. Failure to appear for burglary.
2-28-18 Marcella L. Akin age 39 of Benton. Violation of probation.
3-1-18 Joshua K. Cook age 40 of Christopher. Failure to appear for criminal damage to property.
3-1-18 Gabrielle L. Williams age 29 of West Frankfort. Failure to appear on traffic charges.
3-4-18 Nicole M. Thorpe age 33 of Christopher. Failure to appear for disorderly conduct.
3-6-18 Milburn A. King age 56 of Benton. Failure to appear on D.U.I.
3-6-18 Jessica L. Davies age 34 of Benton. Failure to appear on D.U.I.
3-7-18 Steven R. Rutland age 53 of West Frankfort. Deceptive practice.
3-8-18 Kristian S. Johnson age 24 of Christopher. Failure to appear on traffic charges.
3-9-18 Brittany N. Mann age 27 of Benton. Obstructing a Peace Officer.

Dick Corn remains the driving force behind Pinckneyville basketball

PEORIA – Pinckneyville basketball coach Bob Waggoner talked about how his team continued to grind Friday night in the Class 2A state semifinals at Carver Arena.

The Panthers, down 11 in the final seconds of the third quarter, had two open shots for a potential tie in the final seconds before a 67-63 loss.

“A lot of times, people look at them and think, they’re small town country kids” Waggoner said. “But they have a lot of heart and they’re not going to give in.”

Somewhere in Section 24, the man who brought Waggoner to the school had to feel that same pride.

Please click on the link for the full story from Dave Allen of the Peoria Journal-Star

http://www.pjstar.com/sports/20180309/dick-corn-remains-driving-force-behind-pinckneyville-basketball

Schafer’s three-pointer sends Marion to the Elite Eight

CENTRALIA — Cole Schafer’s three-pointer with 0.2 seconds left in overtime gave Marion a 71-68 win over East St. Louis at the Class 3A Centralia boys basketball sectional on Friday.

The win gave Marion (22-11) its first sectional title in 28 years. The Wildcats move on to the Springfield Super-Sectional to play Springfield Southeast on Tuesday at 7 p.m.

“These kids have no quit in them,” said Marion coach Gus Gillespie. “Early on East Side looked really, really good, but we didn’t quit. This was a heck of a game.”Justin Saddoris led the Wildcats with a game high 20, Jaden Lacy added 16, Terell Henderson 11, and Jackson Conner added 10 for the victorious Wildcats.

Please click on the link for the full story from Geary Dentison of the Southern Illinoisan.

http://thesouthern.com/sports/high-school/basketball/boys/boys-basketball-schafer-s-three-pointer-sends-marion-past-east/article_3acae94d-7422-5545-ac08-67fed8a7367e.html?utm_content=buffer8860f&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=LEEDCC

 

 

 

Three of the four Class 1A state finals coaches back where they played in high school

PEORIA — Apparently, you can go home again.

Three of the four coaches whose teams are in the 1A state finals are back at the schools where they played their high school ball.

Todd Tripp is back at Goreville, Jon Kraus is at Okawville and Alex Coppejans is at the state finals for the second time in his career for Annawan.

Tripp was on the Goreville team that won a regional title in 1993, and he took over the program in 2004.

“Ever since I’ve been little bitty, I wanted to coach,” he said. “And I got a chance to come back and take over for the coach that coached me in high school (Jerry Qualls).”

“I’m a home boy, I guess,” he said. “I’ve always wanted to come back. Nobody wants to leave home.”

Please click on the link for the full story from Johnny Campos of the Peoria Journal-Star

http://www.pjstar.com/sports/20180309/three-of-four-class-1a-state-finals-coaches-back-where-they-played-in-high-school

 

RLC mourns loss of former president Mark Kern

INA, Ill. – The Rend Lake College community lost one of its most impactful leaders Thursday. Mark S. Kern, the longest-serving president in Rend Lake College’s history, passed away March 8, 2018.


“Mark always was an adamant supporter of Rend Lake College. In all his years as an instructor, a dean and as President, every decision he made was for the good of this college,” said RLC President Terry Wilkerson. “There is no doubt that this place would look much different without Mark’s leadership and contributions.”

“The RLC Foundation is deeply saddened to say goodbye to one of our strongest supporters,” said RLC Foundation CEO Kay Zibby-Damron. “Mark Kern remained actively involved on the Foundation Board of Directors after his retirement, which is a testament to his love and passion for Rend Lake College, our community and education. Mark was instrumental in many of the Foundation’s greatest accomplishments and we will be forever grateful for his leadership and support. Our hearts are with Pat and the Kern family during this very difficult time.”

Kern, as a Ewing native, was a home-grown leader who often remarked on his good fortune. “You have to be fortunate to become a community college President, and becoming one in the area in which you grew up is even more special,” he once said. He served as RLC’s president, fifth in its history, from 1991 through 2008.

Visitation will be held from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday, March 12, at Whittington Baptist Church. Service will be at 1 p.m. with burial immediately following at Oak Hill Cemetery. Cory Garmane, an RLC alum, will sing songs to open and close the service, and State Rep. Dave Severin, Franklin County Circuit Clerk Jim Muir, and RLC Foundation Board Member Sam Mateer are scheduled to speak. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Rend Lake College Foundation Mark S. Kern Memorial Fund to assist Rend Lake College students.

A local farmer at heart, Kern got his start in college teaching at Wabash Valley College in Mt. Carmel in 1967, the same year Mt. Vernon Community College became Rend Lake College. It was merely a year later that he returned home to start RLC’s agriculture program, for which the college has been well known over the years.

Add that year to the 39 he ultimately spent with RLC, and Kern spent 40 years of his working life in the Illinois Community College System – longer than any employee in the history of the system, according to the Illinois Community College Trustees Association at the time.

Kern later became chair of the Agriculture, Automotive and Architecture Department, commonly called Triple-A, before becoming Dean of Community Services and later Dean of Instruction. He became RLC’s fifth president in 1991.

Education was an important part of Kern’s life. He earned a Bachelor of Science Degree in Agricultural Industries at Southern Illinois University Carbondale and later a Master of Science Degree in Agricultural Economics from the University of Illinois. After graduation, he had plans to go into ag banking when the Wabash Valley job opened up, and he threw his hat in that ring. As they say, the rest is history.

Kern left an indelible mark on RLC. Some highlights and accomplishments include:

  • Construction of the RLC Foundation Children’s Center
  • Renovation of the Dr. Allen Y. Baker Administration Building
  • Construction of the Clock Tower, the centerpiece of campus which now serves as the model for the college logo
  • Creation of the RLC Murphy-Wall Pinckneyville Campus, with help from the RLC Foundation and the citizens of Pinckneyville
  • Creation of the one-of-a-kind RLC MarketPlace in Mt. Vernon, which transformed a dying outdoor mall into a workable mix of retail stores, a restaurant, educational training facilities, classrooms and computer labs, Project CHILD, and the state’s One-Stop Center, among others
  • Dual credit opportunities which have become overwhelmingly popular with high school students desiring to get a head start on college credits and save in-district parents millions of dollars.
  • The Hitting Zone and Sports Center, now combined into The Rec
  • Construction of the Coal Mine Training Center

Perhaps the most visible tribute to his legacy is the 22,300-square-foot Applied Science Center, which now carries his name in honor of his service. It is safe to say that this building, which houses the Agriculture Business, Agricultural Production and Mechanics, Diesel Technology and Heavy Equipment Technology, was close to the heart of the local farmboy.

1MarkKern2web

Kern was responsible for initiating the first Advisory Council and on-job training programs, both of which are still in existence for almost all career-technical programs. He also led the college through multiple reaccreditation visits from the Higher Learning Commission.

As president and after he retired, Kern was a dedicated member of the Rend Lake College Foundation. After retirement, he was named an emeritus member of the RLC Foundation Board of Directors. Kern’s wife Pat served as CEO of that organization for many years. The Foundation awards hundreds of thousands of dollars each year in student scholarship and also supports various types of projects which advance the college.

Some of his honors include:

  • Induction into the RLC Sports Hall of Fame class of 2008 for his support of Warrior athletics
  • Franklin County 4-H “Outstanding Alumnus” and Franklin County Soil Conservation “Farmer of the Year”
  • One of three Illinoisans selected for the Cooperative Extension Cow Tour in 1987
  • 2001 Statewide Commercial Producers Award
  • Past Vice President and Secretary of the Illinois Council of Community College Administrators
  • Past member of the Benton Consolidated High School Board of Education
  • Kern farmed in partnership with his father, Frank, for many years, and later owned and operated a 660-acre farm with 100 head of beef cows

“I really believe the community college system has been the most exciting and most productive area of education during the last 40-plus years. I have been fortunate to have spent 40 years in that system. I have made friends with many fine people, including staff, Board members, Foundation Board members and other key people in the community,” Kern said upon his retirement.

Kern is survived by his wife Pat; children Frank, Eric, Brian, Jason and Megan; and Pat’s daughter Melissa. Mark and Pat have eight grandchildren.

Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News