Former Peotone Firefighter Mike Shivers Recommended for Fire District Board Position
The Manhattan Fire Protection District board unanimously recommended Mike Shivers to fill a vacant trustee position left by the recent death of Trustee Bill Osborne.
Shivers, a former Peotone Fire Protection District board trustee who also served as a firefighter, was recommended during Monday’s board meeting as part of the district’s consolidation agreement to incorporate Peotone residents and board members.
“The agreement with the consolidation was to incorporate Peotone residents/Board members,” according to the meeting minutes. “Mike Shivers was a previous Peotone FPD Board Trustee and served as a Firefighter and is recommended to fill this vacant position.”
The recommendation passed on a unanimous roll call vote by the six current trustees: Bill Moncrief, Nick Kotchou (participating via Zoom), Larry Goodwin, Bill Weber, Bob Davis, and Brian Hupe.
The board appointment reflects the district’s commitment to maintaining representation from both Manhattan and Peotone communities following the consolidation of the two fire protection districts.
Osborne’s passing created the vacancy on the seven-member board, which oversees operations for the district serving both Manhattan and Peotone areas.
Latest News Stories
Malibu continues to rebuild one year after Palisades Fire
‘Promises kept’: American energy dominance has advanced in Trump’s first year
Illinois millionaire’s tax would direct 50% of revenue to public schools
Group seeks clarity on local IL governments using tax dollars for polling
Illinois congressmen call for accountability after fatal Minneapolis shooting
Kavanagh: Mayes must resign, her comments endanger ICE
Riots continue in Twin Cities
Former GOP lawmaker urges regulators to block potential Netflix-Warner Bros. merger
U.S. withdrawal from WHO completed over COVID-19 mishandling
Judge ends anti-ICE case, jumps into IL Dems’ bid to freeze ICE
U.S. Supreme Court to define decades-old consumer law
WATCH: Candidate investigates Medicaid spending; Diversity program audit urged