PHOTO COURTESY DIOCESE OF SPRINGFIELD IN ILLINOIS
San Damiano College for the Trades is currently accepting applications for its inaugural class in the fall of 2025. The three-year trade school, geared toward young men, will be located on the former Springfield campus of the Chiara Center.

CHANGE OF PLANS?

I am confused. I read Scott Reeder's recent story about the former Chiara Center becoming a trade school with some classic education added ("Rebuilding the Catholic church," June 6). But is this the same reporter who told us in your pages in 2022 that the Chiara Center was destined to be a shrine to a modern saint from Italy ("Sign of the times," Aug. 11, 2022)?

Reeder reported that plan as absolute fact, including how the resident nuns were working with Bishop Thomas Paprocki and how the saint's daughter was, too, and would be living in Springfield to see the shrine completed. The daughter, Dr. Gianna Molla, told Reeder, "It was God who chose Springfield."

I know everybody is entitled to change their mind, but this seems huge, switching shrine to shop class. And there is nary a single word in the new story about the old story.

As for the new plan, it has its own problems. It is said to be the brainchild of Bishop Paprocki, as tone-deaf a religious leader as I can remember coming to town. As his hired hand, the trade school's first president says it will be all males for at least its first five years. What is this place, a club in a treehouse in the 1950s? And even then, according to the article, females are more likely to study becoming "nursing assistants, art restorers and ecclesial seamstresses."

I find all this regrettable but not unpredictable, sadly.

Douglas Kamholz

Springfield

Editor's note: Andrew Hansen, a spokesperson for the Diocese of Springfield, confirmed to IT that the shrine is no longer planned for Springfield.

HOPE IT'S DENIED

Here's hoping their application for operating authority from the Illinois College Board of Higher Education gets a big fat denial for misogynistic discrimination. Do these guys know what year it is? Plus, $25,000 a year for three years and an associate's degree? If anything, I hope this sends flocks of students to take a look at Lincoln Land Community College.

Tara Marie

Via Facebook.com/illinoistimes

DO IT YOURSELF

The way I see it, there is nothing keeping another organization from doing the same thing for women if they wanted. Anyone up in arms about this, form a board and put your indignation into action. I, for one, see great promise in it. I hope that the inaugural class of 26 begets thousands more in the coming decades. The trades are deficient in skilled laborers, regardless of gender.

John D. Polack

Via Facebook.com/illinoistimes

BAD LEADERSHIP

Wow, women have been told to be in nursing or a seamstress. Don't worry about those manly jobs. Good grief. You want to know what's wrong with the Catholic church in Springfield, look at the top. Absolutely disgusting 1950s-era attitudes.

Mike Shipman

Via Facebook.com/illinoistimes

UNIONS ARE FOR WOMEN TOO

Not admitting women for five years? Sure hope there isn't any public funding involved. I would hate to see my hard-earned tax dollars going toward an institution that denies other women the opportunity I was afforded to be a tradeswoman.

Perhaps it is time to remind people that labor unions already have apprenticeships that admit applicants regardless of gender, race, religion or any other identifying factor, and there is no cost for tuition. One of the smartest choices I ever made was to enter the IBEW apprenticeship. As a journeyman wireman and chair of Local 193's Women Committee, I encourage anyone, especially women, to explore this avenue.

Union trades work is one of the few areas of employment that genuinely has equal pay. Come join us, and take pride in your work as you build America. There's a lot of good brotherhood and sisterhood out here in the field, and none of it requires a religious litmus test.

Denise Solon

Via illinoistimes.com

BETTER OPTIONS

Try Lincoln Land Community College for less time, less money and less misogyny.

Tracy Owens

Via Facebook.com/illinoistimes

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