Lincoln-Way School Board Certifies Election, Re-elects Janik as President
The Lincoln-Way Community High School District 210 Board of Education officially reorganized for the upcoming year during its meeting on April 17, certifying the results of the April 1 consolidated election and re-electing its leadership team.
The board unanimously accepted the official canvass of votes from the Will County Clerk, which confirmed full four-year terms for incumbents Aaron P. Janik, Deadra W. Stokes, and Joseph M. Kosteck. According to the official results, Kosteck received the most votes with 9,986, followed by Stokes with 9,721, and Janik with 9,678.
Following the certification, the board moved to elect its officers for the next year. In a series of unanimous votes, the board re-elected its entire leadership slate:
-
President: Aaron P. Janik
-
Vice-President: Catherine Johnson
-
Secretary: Deadra W. Stokes
The board also voted to keep the position of Secretary as a non-compensated role.
The re-elected members—Janik, Stokes, and Kosteck—recited the oath of office administered by Vice President Johnson.
The full Board of Education now consists of President Aaron P. Janik, Vice President Catherine Johnson, Secretary Deadra W. Stokes, and members Dana Bergthold, Joseph M. Kosteck, Richard C. LaCien Jr., and Caitlin Olejnik.
Committee appointments were also announced for the year. Dana Bergthold will serve on the District 843 Governing Board, Catherine Johnson on the District 210 Advisory Committee, Joseph M. Kosteck as the Lincoln-Way Foundation Liaison, Caitlin Olejnik as the IASB Three Rivers Board Representative, and Deadra W. Stokes as the IASB Board Delegate.
Latest News Stories
Senators weigh American privacy risks in FBI Investigations
Illinois quick hits: John Deere to build in North Carolina
State rep questions Pritzker move to ‘expand and expand and expand’ on abortion
$1,000 Trump accounts to start July 4
Rubio explains reasoning behind Trump’s Venezuela strikes in Senate hearing
WATCH: Kelly to vote against funding Homeland Security
Census projections show red states to see gains in U.S. House seats, electoral college
Chicago mayor visits D.C., considers order to prosecute federal agents
DHS: Agents linked to death of Pretti placed on leave
FBI raids Fulton County election office in 2020 election fraud probe
Fed keeps interest rates steady in first meeting of 2026
Report: Minnesota student walkouts received training from progressive activists