Wheelhouse owners to take over Atkins Golf Club restaurant
Restaurateurs Abbie and Ryan Rogiers, owners of the Wheelhouse located inside the Main Street Station at 109 N. Main in St. Joseph, will launch a new restaurant operation at the Atkins Golf Club in December.
The couple will use their fine dining expertise to manage and run "Homegrown" at the University of Illinois Division of Intercollegiate Athletics' golf course in east Urbana's Stone Creek Subdivision. The Rogiers, who have owned the popular St. Joseph dining location since 2017, plan to extend their high-quality farm-to-table meals to the new venture.
Homegrown will feature organic ingredients grown on a plot of land in the Stone Creek Subdivision. Daily menu items will include marcoot creamery herb and garlic cheese curds, buttermilk chicken wings, Cuban Rueben, grass-fed beef stew, and a 16-oz. ribeye.
Full-service dining is set to open in early December. The exact date of the grand opening will be announced in November.
The restaurant is currently hiring cooks, hosts, and wait staff. Homegrown will host a job fair on Tuesday, November 2 from 3-6 p.m. at 2600 Stone Creek Blvd. No appointment is necessary. Prospective employees may stop at any time during those hours. For more information about employment opportunities or reservations, email info@eatathomegrown.com.
Halloween rules in some Illinois cities are no treat
by Dylan Sharkey, Illinois Policy
Put on a costume, grab a bag and get free treats? It’s not so simple in Illinois, where cities’ Halloween rules restrict the simple fun.
There are tricks to getting treats on Halloween in Illinois – some are old rules in cities trying to stop some long-forgotten issue, and others are recent from communities that won’t trust residents to make good choices about COVID-19.
Oak Brook, Elmhurst, Western Springs and La Grange are among towns that set hours for trick-or-treating, starting at 2 or 3 p.m. and ending no later than 8 p.m.
Darien and Downers Grove don’t set hours, but recommend no trick-or-treating when it’s dark outside. (Trick-or-treating after dark? The horrors!)
The village of Hinsdale is offering residents premade yard signs: One welcoming trick-or-treaters, one telling costumed kids to get off their lawn and one asking that they wear a mask. Masks from a costume don’t count.
"If your costume has a mask, it must prevent the spread of aerosols from your mouth and nose to qualify. Social distancing of at least 6 feet is recommended whenever possible. Wait for trick-or-treaters ahead of you to leave the home before proceeding for your treat," Hinsdale city leaders advised aerosol-emitting youngsters.
Forsyth, just outside Decatur, imposes a $750 fine for approaching a house with no porch lights on for free candy.
Belleville has an age restriction: nobody older than 12 can trick-or-treat. If caught committing "Halloween Solicitation," they can face a fine of up to $1,000.
Kids should make sure they research their local ordinances before hitting the streets on Halloween. Just allowing parents to set the rules is too scary for some places.
Photo: Jill Wellington/Pexels
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