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Residents press Glendale Heights for safer pick‑up at Americana Elementary; board says solutions under discussion with school district

May 16, 2025 | Glendale Heights, DuPage County, Illinois


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Residents press Glendale Heights for safer pick‑up at Americana Elementary; board says solutions under discussion with school district
Parents and residents raised safety concerns May 15 about student pick‑up and drop‑off at Americana Elementary School and the adjacent Cameron Park, saying congestion and driver behavior create hazardous crossings for children.

"The crossing guards and the police assistants do a fantastic job, and we need them," said Sarah Press, a Glendale Heights resident, during public comment. Press described parents parking on both sides of Fullerton Avenue and drivers speeding or circling to get closer to the school, and she suggested timing or signal changes to improve visibility.

Marie Plaszek, another resident, said children are frightened crossing at Van Meter and Fullerton and urged more traffic control: "A stop sign would be extremely helpful for these kids."

Board response and next steps: President Giannelli acknowledged the long-running congestion issues in the campus area and said the village has had initial conversations with Village Administrator Doug Flint and others. Board members told the audience they are consulting with District 16 leadership about coordinated solutions. On the record, trustees described a preliminary plan under discussion with District 16 Superintendent Dr. Williams to establish a wrap‑around car pickup route that would route vehicles off Fullerton and onto a circulation path behind the playground and return them to President Avenue; the board characterized that concept as being in early, exploratory stages.

No ordinance, resolution or formal action was adopted at the meeting on this issue. Board members said further study and coordination with District 16 will be needed before any changes are implemented, and they indicated follow‑up conversations with the school district and staff are planned.

Why it matters: The intersection and adjacent streets serve multiple schools, a public library and recreation facilities, producing heavy pedestrian and vehicular traffic at dismissal. Residents said congestion routinely blocks neighborhood driveways and creates risks for students crossing between parked cars.

What was requested: Residents asked for additional crossing guards, more visible traffic controls (including stop signs or functioning flashing crosswalk signals), and enforcement of parking restrictions around dismissal times. Village staff said resources and staffing levels for crossing guards and police are constrained and that a longer-term traffic circulation plan will require partnership with the school district and further operational planning.

Next steps: Trustees said the village will continue discussions with District 16 and review options for traffic circulation, enforcement and signage. No staff assignment or firm timeline was recorded in the meeting minutes for implementing changes.

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