Categories
Small Business Funding

New Boutique Coming To Godfrey [Video]

[video:7027]GODFREY – The Village of Godfrey continues to expand its business offerings as a new boutique, Modern Daisy Boutique, is set to open on Godfrey Road. The new business will occupy a storefront directly next to Buck’s Decorating Center, which is located at 5411 Godfrey Road.Godfrey Economic Development Director Jim Mager announced the new business’s arrival and recent grant approval at this week’s Village Board meeting.“The mayor and I have approved a small grant to a new business that’s coming into town,” Mager said. “It’s called Modern Daisy Boutique.“As the name implies, it’s going to be a boutique and [they’ll] have kind of specialty items … we’ll have a new retail shop, so we’re looking forward to that.”An exact opening date for Daisy’s Boutique has not yet been announced.A full recording of the Tuesday, May 7, 2024 Godfrey Village Board meeting is available at the top of this story or on Riverbender.com/video. Catch other Village Board meetings live or on demand with your smart TV on theRiverbender.com ROKU channel and on theRiverbender.com YouTube channel. 

Categories
Home Based Business

Alton Superintendent Welcomes Students to School, Outlines District Improvement Plan [Video]

[video:7490]ALTON – As students and staff at Alton Community Unit School District #11 settle into the school year, Superintendent Elaine Kane breaks down the District Improvement Plan.Kane welcomed the community back to school and expressed her excitement to serve in the superintendent role. “I wouldn’t want to do it anywhere else,” she said. “The 31 years that I’ve been in Alton have been so meaningful to me because of the relationships. And this is my home. I’m an Alton High graduate. Our four kids graduated from Alton. So it’s personal. The work here for me is personal. This is my community.”Kane explained that the district has spent the last 18 months working on the District Improvement Plan. Administrators and the Board of Education have categorized everyone in the district into one of two groups: the people who teach and the people who create the conditions for teaching and learning.By dividing responsibilities into these two categories, Kane said, it allows staff members to focus on their priorities. Anyone who interacts with students is considered a person who teaches because they are influencing students. The remainder of the district, including administrators and the Board of Education, create the conditions for this teaching and learning.“Every time we make a decision or allocate resources, we ask ourselves, is that going to create excellent conditions for teaching and learning? Because that’s what we believe the students and the staff in Alton deserve,” Kane said. “They deserve outstanding conditions, so that’s our gut check. That’s how we do business.”The District Improvement Plan has also identified three key areas that ACUSD11 plans to focus on going forward. These priorities include creating a culture of belonging, grade-appropriate instruction and assignments, and high-quality professional learning communities. Kane explained that the culture of belonging is important because people tend to do better when they feel like they belong. At the most recent Board of Education meeting, ACUSD11 principals discussed how they will create a culture of belonging in their schools going forward.The grade-appropriate instruction and assignments priority addresses the curriculum that students are exposed to. Kane noted that all students in the U.S. are operating by the same standards, so ACUSD11 wants to ensure their students are prepared.“Our second goal is grade-appropriate instruction and assignments. So when we say that, we’re saying every student deserves access to the core curriculum,” she explained. “We know the standards are the same all across the United States, so students in Alton are going to be just as prepared as students in any other community across the United States. We’re constantly checking ourselves, are we teaching to that high expectation?” The professional learning communities refer to the teams within schools. Kane believes that teamwork and collaboration benefit the district and the students, and this is a focus within the schools going forward.“Our administrative team is a professional team, our school board is a professional team, each grade level team of teachers is a professional team,” Kane said. “Functioning as teams, that’s one of our priorities because we know that’s how we do our best work.”Each individual school has developed a school improvement plan that addresses the three priorities articulated in the District Improvement Plan. The District Improvement Plan was unanimously approved by the ACUSD11 Board of Education during their most recent meeting. 

Categories
Small Business Funding

Local Restaurant & Retail Discounts & Prizes [Video]

November 12th – 15th join the Riverbend Growth Association at the 2013 Small Business Member Blitz. ENJOY PRIZES AND DEEP DISCOUNTS AT OVER 50 PARTICIPATING RESTAURANT AND RETAIL LOCATIONS. Support our local small businesses, save some money, and have lots of fun all at the same time! FOR MORE INFORMATION and the PRIZE GIVEAWAY SCHEDULE visit http://www.growthassociation.com/page/shopsmall/

Categories
Small Business Funding

Our Daily Show Interview! Olive Oil Marketplace: Getting Us Ready for the Holidays! [Video]

We are talking with Olive Oil Market Place! Tim fills us in on their Holiday Baskets, and how we can support them on Small Business Saturday! PLUS, CJ asked Tim for a bit of an impromptu last-minute Thanksgiving Dish (for the folks who don’t know how to prepare)!

Categories
Home Based Business

Absolute Health Care Services Offers At-Home Care to Bridge Gaps [Video]

[video:6594]ALTON/GODFREY – Absolute Health Care Services and Asbury Village have teamed up via the North Alton-Godfrey Business Council (NAGBC) to provide healthcare to people across the Riverbend community.Now in its 20th year of business, Absolute Health Care Services helps families navigate Medicare and benefits in addition to providing health services for seniors. The company offers different levels of at-home care, from companionship to housekeeping to complete personal care.“I just had an opening yesterday and the family was amazed that we could run errands or go to the grocery store for them or feed the cat or the dog,” said Debra Ross, owner of Absolute Health Care. “I’m like, ‘Look, we’ll take the load off you guys. You visit your mom and enjoy quality time with her. We’ll run to the grocery store. We’ll prepare the meals. We’ll do meal planning. We can do all that.’ They’re not being a caregiver. They’re having a relationship with their mom or their dad.”The goal, Ross explained, is to bridge gaps in service and make it easier for people to live at home. Depending on what a client needs, Absolute Health Care matches them with a companion, sitter, registered nurse or other licensed worker. Some nurses also serve as case managers.Ross noted that she is conscious of every family’s financials, and she tries to connect people with the services they need for the lowest price. Unlike other home health services, Absolute Health Care doesn’t require a minimum of hours or charge extra for nights or weekends. They also work in conjunction with Medicare, so people can take advantage of the services covered by Medicare in addition to private duty services from Absolute Health Care.“There’s so many avenues of private duty home health and Medicare home health that families aren’t aware of,” Ross said. “With my business, they get confused with Medicare home health and private duty home health. So we’ll work in conjunction with them. Medicare does intermittent visits and our private duty home health can stay all day, hourly, up to 24 hours a day, and I can also schedule opposite of Medicare. So if Medicare can do three visits a week, I let them take the three visits. We don’t interfere on that. We tell the clients, utilize the visits you can through Medicare so you don’t have to pay so much out of pocket.”Absolute Health Care will work with clients to figure out what services they need. They also work with Asbury Village to provide skilled services on the Asbury Village campus in Godfrey. Ross encourages people to call her at 618-466-1010 for more information. She noted that senior health has been a passion of hers for most of her life.“My grandmother raised me, so I was always around an older generation, and I just really loved them, adored them, respected them, was in awe of them. So when I became a nurse, I went right into home healthcare,” Ross remembered. “You have to be committed and you have to be passionate about which way you go in that profession…Every nurse has a desire and passion to work in a different [nursing] field, and thank God they do. It’s a chosen field for me.”Ross expressed appreciation for the North Alton-Godfrey Business Council and their work to connect businesses like Absolute Health Care with the community. For more information about Absolute Health Care Services, check out this article on RiverBender.com or visit their official website at AHCSLLC.com. 

Categories
Home Based Business

Local Business CMI Construction Prides Itself on Transparency, Owner Says [Video]

[video:6879]BELLEVILLE – For Coy Mullenix, the Home Builders & Remodelers Metro East Association Home Expo is a chance to share his construction company with the Metro East region.CMI Construction & Remodeling prides itself on transparency and low prices, Mullenix said. He explained that the business is the “go-to” contractor for area homes that range from $650,000 to $2.5–3 million, and every dollar is accounted for.“What we do for our clients is we show them where every dollar goes in the home, including our profit and overhead. We work off a modest 10% profit and overhead,” Mullenix said. “It’s really black and white, no gray areas. It’s been a homerun.”Over the past 35 years, CMI Construction & Remodeling has made a name for itself throughout the Metro East area. They work within a 30-mile radius of Columbia, Illinois, including as far north as Edwardsville. Mullenix explained that each build starts with a meet-and-greet with the client and a $2,500 retainer. The company then gives their “full attention” to the client. They create a 250-page binder for the client that “shows every dollar going into the home,” Mullenix noted.“It’s just straight cost plus 10%,” he added. “What we try to do is we try to give our clients the absolute best value for your dollar. You say, ‘Coy, I’ve got a dollar to spend,’ I’m going to try to get you everything you want for 90 cents or 85 cents. It’s about giving the absolute best product and the best subs and the best suppliers for the best value.”Mullenix pointed out that CMI’s transparency helps them build a relationship with the client. As a result, he is often invited back to clients’ houses, which he considers a testament to the company’s work.“For us, it’s all about transparency,” he said. “The more transparent we are, it builds that relationship and that trust and that team. A lot of times you hear all the horror stories about dealing with contractors, that it’s the contractor and the client always butting heads. And with us, we form a relationship.”At this year’s Home Expo, Mullenix represented the Union Contractors Consult. He noted that the union educates their contractors and workers to make sure “they learn the right way.”“All of our guys are all drug-tested, they’re all educated, they go through a four-year trade program and they learn to do things the right way versus a young guy getting thrown out on the job site trying to figure it out,” Mullenix said.For more information about CMI Construction & Remodeling, visit CMIBuilders.com. To learn more about the Home Builders & Remodelers Metro East Association, check out hbrmea.org.