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Centegra Huntley tops local stories of 2012

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Proposed Centegra Hospital in Huntley. (Photo provided)

A new hospital and the end of a longtime mental health provider top the Northwest Herald’s list of most newsworthy local events of 2012.

After two years, Centegra Health System got permission to build a Huntley hospital. And funding issues led to the closing of Family Service and Community Mental Health Center.

Two teachers’ strikes that last one day each spared parents of longer-term child care concerns, and the completion of the long-sought widening of Rakow Road now spares tens of thousands of commuters.

As in previous years, this year’s top news events also include the deaths of local servicemen – one in Afghanistan and the other in the Aurora, Colo., movie theater shooting.


1. Centegra gets nod to build Huntley hospital

Persistence paid off for Centegra in its quest to build a Huntley hospital.

The Illinois Health Facilities and Services Review Board in July voted to grant Centegra a certificate of need to build a $233 million, 128-bed hospital at tReed and Haligus roads in Huntley. A certificate of need is required in Illinois to build or close a hospital.

Centegra applied for a certificate in December 2010, the same day that Mercy Health System reapplied to build a hospital in Crystal Lake. Janesville, Wis.-based Mercy is appealing its latest rejection.

Centegra officials said they hope to have the Huntley hospital open in 2016.


2. Family Service shuts its doors

A 50-year-old mental health clinic that served more than 6,000 clients a year closed at the end of June.

Funding issues, such as $850,000 in late state-aid payments and debts on two mortgages, brought an end to Family Service. The ailing agency had pinned its last hopes to stay alive on a merger with North Central Behavioral Health Systems, but the deal fell through in May.


3. Crystal Lake sailor killed in Colo. shooting

A fourth-generation Crystal Lake sailor was among the 12 killed in a mass shooting in an Aurora, Colo., movie theater.

Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class John Larimer died July 20 when a gunman opened fire into the audience during a midnight screening of “The Dark Knight Rises.” The 27-year old Larimer, a 2003 graduate of Crystal Lake South High School and a Navy cryptologist, was stationed at Buckley Air Force Base in Aurora.

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