Illinois
‘The kids chose a great playground’: Geometric climbing structure coming to Rolling Meadows park
Quito, a 15-foot high play structure manufactured by Pennsylvania-based Playworld, will be installed in July at Countryside Park in Rolling Meadows.
Courtesy of Rolling Meadows Park District
A Rolling Meadows park is set to become the first in Illinois to feature a geometric net climber on its playground, officials said.
The unique play structure is called Quito, a 15-foot high playhouse that allows kids “to climb, balance, and teeter their way in, over, and through,” according to Playworld, the commercial playground equipment manufacturer.
The structure will be installed in July, along with friendship swings for families and tire swing-style equipment for multiple users, at Countryside Park, 4360 Euclid Ave.
Children selected the new playground out of three proposals brought by vendors to a community input meeting in February.
“The kids chose a great playground,” said Superintendent of Parks Brian McKenna. “Out of the choices, this would have been the one I would have picked.”
The park district is paying Westchester-based sales agency Imagine Nation $165,000 for the new playground equipment, but officials expect to save about $65,000 by doing the installation in-house, McKenna said.
Park districts commonly donate old playgrounds around the world, but officials said the old Countryside Park playground, at 20 years old, is too outdated to be reused or donated.
Quito is named after the capital city of Ecuador, not only the highest capital in the world, but the one closest to the equator. The webbed play structure has bells at the top and ground levels, triangle windows and a triangle roof.
McKenna said the structure promotes a creative play experience as children attempt various ways to climb through the web.
“Children can climb on it differently each time they use it,” McKenna said. “With the slide, you go up the steps, sit on the slide and slide down. That experience isn’t going to change much. When you have a large climbing structure like Quito, children are offered a range of options for navigating and traversing the framework from various angles.”
The first Quito climber was installed in 2022 at a park in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, where Playworld is headquartered.
Illinois
Report: Illinois special teams coordinator heading to Ohio State
Illinois special teams coordinator Robby Discher is reportedly heading to Columbus.
CBS Sports reported Saturday that Discher will take over the same position for Ryan Day’s staff at Ohio State.
Discher’s career has taken him to Tulane, Georgia and Louisiana before Illinois, where he arrived in 2023.
Over the last two seasons, Illinois’ special teams unit ranked No. 16 and No. 30 in the nation by ESPN’s efficiency metric.
No word on who will take over on Bret Bielema’s staff, but it appears it’s the only coordinator spot he will have to fill this offseason, as Aaron Henry and Barry Lunney Jr. have stayed put so far.
Illinois
Illinois files complaint against Gino & Marty’s over unpaid wages
The Illinois Department of Labor filed a complaint against Gino and Marty’s in which it says the now-shuttered restaurant owes its former employees more than $20,000 for unpaid or underpaid wages.
The complaint, filed in Cook County Circuit Court, names the restaurant’s management company, White Glove Service and Management LLC, and several individual owners and managers. The Fulton Market restaurant closed last summer after opening in 2022.
Between December 2023 and August 2025, at least nine employees weren’t paid their tips or gratuities, and others were paid at a rate below the minimum wage, according to the state labor agency, which says they’re owed more than $20,000 in unpaid wages. The agency said it is pursuing other damages that could be owed under state law.
“Illinois law is clear: workers must be paid fully, fairly and on time,” Illinois Department of Labor Director Jane Flanagan said.
Illinois
Illinois sees third-straight year of population growth. What to know
Illinois’ population has grown for the third consecutive year, according to new estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau.
Between July 1, 2024, and July 1, 2025, Illinois added 16,108 residents – an increase of more than 100,000 residents since 2022.
“Illinois recorded its third consecutive year of population growth, as the state remains focused on strengthening the factors that help people choose to stay and build their lives here,” said Gov. JB Pritzker. “That’s why we are focused on making long-term investments in education, public safety, and economic opportunity — so families can raise their kids here, workers can build careers, and entrepreneurs can start and grow businesses across Illinois.”
Illinois population growth in the last year was in part due to natural population gains and slowing domestic outmigration. The state’s birth rate continued to outpace its death rate with approximately 125,000 births and 114,000 deaths, for a net gain of about 11,000 residents. The domestic outmigration fell to its lowest level in 15 years, with 40,017 residents leaving Illinois between July 2024 and 2025.
Recent population estimates also reflect ongoing efforts from state officials to improve the accuracy of Illinois’ census data. Following the 2020 Census, the U.S. Census Bureau’s Post-Enumeration Survey found Illinois was undercounted by approximately 250,000 people, reflecting Illinois crossing 13 million residents. A subsequent Post-Census Group Quarters Review also identified more than 46,000 additional residents now incorporated into population estimates in later years.
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