Where I Come From

I've lived in McHenry County for 18 years, and have raised my family here.  My youngest graduates from high school this spring, and will likely be far from picture of candidate home starting college in the fall.  My next youngest graduates from college this spring, and he will be looking for a job during hard economic times. My oldest graduated from college last spring, and is lucky enough to have a job: he is teaching high school chemistry in Houston, TX through the Teach for America program.

I grew up in Michigan, where my grandmothers were both teachers.  At different points in my parents' lives, one during and one after the Depression, each of their families relied wholly on the incomes that came from my grandmothers' teaching. 

My father came back from the World War II mobilization to start his education at Bay City Junior College.  With the help of the GI Bill, he was able to finish both college and law school.  My mother's college education was interrupted by her family's economic hardship, but our local community college, the successor to the junior college my father attended, gave her that second chance while I was in high school.  Her studies were my own chance to imagine what higher education could offer, and because of her example, and because of the income that my father brought in because of his own educational good fortune, I was able to attend the University of Chicago.  

My two youngest brothers went to the same community college that gave my mother her second chance.  One skateboarded more than he studied in high school, and then, after taking five years to explore the American West, and then Malaysia, India and Nepal, he came back wanting an educational second chance himself: he got one because of the community college.   My youngest brother, by contrast, had a good academic record in high school, but needed to continue living at home because of a congenital heart problem.  He's the smartest of us all (he's the one advising me on this campaign), and he increased his own intellectual resourcefulness following the same path my mother did, starting at our local community college.

How I Put Bread on my Family's Table

The bottom line: I know how important McHenry County College can be, for all sorts of different reasons, to families in our community.  I make my living as a college traveler, selling college textbooks for W. W. Norton and Company (one of the last independent publishing houses).  Every time the economy contracts, I see the parking lots in the community colleges around the Chicago region spill over into the grassy areas, with police officers brought in to direct traffic.  In an economic downturn such as we are currently experiencing, the mission of McHenry County College becomes even more vital.  

I hope for better economic times ahead.  I worked full-time as an Obama Fellow this past summer (while school was out) in Saginaw, Michigan, the town that my parents grew up in.  In the fall, I worked weekends on the campaign in northwest Indiana, a state which ended up voting for Obama, the first time they'd voted for a Democrat since 1964.  My message to people I talked to during the campaign was that Obama was not our savior; if he got in, Obama could open the door of possibility, but it was up to us to get the country back onto a better track.  And so, on top of my job selling books, I want to do my part by putting myself forward to represent you on the board of trustees of the college we collectively own, McHenry County College.         

To create this site, I used a free template called Adam, from the Creative Commons cited below, along with a free WYSIWYG editor ('wysiwyg' stands for 'What you see is what you get'), called KompoZer.  This is the first website I've ever created.  I hope to show by running a successful campaign using it that ordinary citizens in McHenry County can, by using tools and institutions that are readily available, join in the process of self-governance that has distinguished this country for over 200 years.

The website was paid for by Citizens to Elect John Darger. A copy of our report filed with the County Clerk is (or will be) available for purchase from the County Clerk, Katherine C. Schultz, McHenry County Clerk, McHenry County Government Center 2200 N. Seminary Ave. Woodstock, IL 60098