Max Painter - SJO Daily https://sjodaily.com Fri, 31 Jan 2020 15:37:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://sjodaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/cropped-sjo-daily-logo-32x32.png Max Painter - SJO Daily https://sjodaily.com 32 32 St. Joseph board votes down Package/Pour license https://sjodaily.com/2020/01/31/st-joseph-board-votes-down-package-pour-license/ Fri, 31 Jan 2020 15:35:13 +0000 https://sjodaily.com/?p=6404 Photo by Heather Schlitz: A man feeds $20 bills into a video gambling machine at Roch’s Place. The bar/grill is currently the only business in St. Joseph that operates gambling machines.  BY HEATHER SCHLITZ During a Tuesday night St. Joseph Village Board meeting, trustees voted 3-2 against a motion that […]

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Photo by Heather Schlitz: A man feeds $20 bills into a video gambling machine at Roch’s Place. The bar/grill is currently the only business in St. Joseph that operates gambling machines. 

BY HEATHER SCHLITZ

During a Tuesday night St. Joseph Village Board meeting, trustees voted 3-2 against a motion that would’ve allowed gas stations, convenience stores and grocery stores in the municipality to operate gambling machines.

Jack Flash, a chain of convenience stores with a location in St. Joseph, had pushed for the creation of a Package/Pour license that would’ve allowed the store to serve alcohol poured on store premises in addition to bottled alcohol. 

In order to nab a video gambling license in Illinois, businesses must have a liquor license that allows them to serve alcohol that is consumed on-premises. Jack Flash currently only has a package liquor license and is restricted from operating video gambling machines.

Trustees worried that expanding gambling to businesses in town that currently only have package liquor licenses would damage the town’s image. 

“My thoughts are that they (the gambling machines) are too trashy,” village trustee Max Painter, who voted against the package/pour license, said. 

“I’m concerned about the branding of the community,” Mayor Tami Fruhling-Voges, who cast the tie-breaking vote against package/pour, said. “We do allow it (gambling machines) for our restaurants. Those are very small, local restaurants and if they need a little bit of help to subsidize their business to make it, I want to make sure they have that opportunity. By adding that additional license classification, you’re opening it up for another business to do that.”

People attending the meeting said that amending the liquor license would increase the possibility of drinking and driving, allow too many businesses in the village to operate gambling machines and negatively influence the children who frequent convenience stores. 

Lisa Wortman, co-owner of Jack Flash, showed the trustees a petition she claimed had more than 100 signatories in support of the package/pour license. Though she declined to make the petition viewable to the public, some trustees pointed out that many of the signatory’s addresses were from outside of St. Joseph. 

“I didn’t have anyone come into my store saying they supported the gaming in the community,” Jim Wagner, village trustee and owner of Wagner Signs + Graphics, said. He also raised concerns that the gambling machines would drive away potential residents.

Wortman attempted to assuage the concerns of trustees and audience members, saying that Jack Flash would build a gambling section walled off from the rest of the store and that poured alcohol makes up less than 1% of their sales in other Jack Flash locations that operate gambling machines. 

Roch’s Place is the only business in the village with a video gambling license and operates four gambling machines in a cramped space walled off from the rest of the bar and restaurant. The village received $12,408 in taxes from the Roch’s gambling machines in 2019, money that the mayor said has gone toward the stormwater fund. 

A letter from the owners of Roch’s Place was read aloud during the meeting, where the owners expressed worries that allowing additional businesses to profit from video gambling would eat into the bar’s revenue as a small, family-owned business. 

“It wasn’t an easy decision,” Fruhling-Voges said. “I’ve been tossing around with pros and cons for two months about what would be best for the community.” 

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St. Joe Santa 5k registration open, event on Dec. 21 https://sjodaily.com/2019/11/18/st-joe-santa-5k-registration-open-event-on-dec-21/ Mon, 18 Nov 2019 16:02:14 +0000 https://sjodaily.com/?p=5576 BY DANI TIETZ dani@sjodaily.com St. Nick may need to take off a few pounds before eating millions of cookies on Christmas Eve. But, you may not be able to find the jolly ol’ man at the St. Joe Santa 5k on Dec. 21. Hundreds of runners are expected to show […]

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BY DANI TIETZ
dani@sjodaily.com

St. Nick may need to take off a few pounds before eating millions of cookies on Christmas Eve.

But, you may not be able to find the jolly ol’ man at the St. Joe Santa 5k on Dec. 21. Hundreds of runners are expected to show up in holiday spirits and Santa gear for the second annual run/walk.

Event organizers Max Painter and Brenda Hixson, who compete in races together annually, were pleased with last year’s registration numbers, which totaled just over 300. Painter and Hixson wanted to provide both avid runners and families an opportunity to end the season on a high note. 

While the event raises money for local charities, race participants will also leave the race with goodies and a memory that will last a lifetime.

The $25 registration fee includes a Santa hat, Santa beard, long-sleeved red shirt, finishing medal and a photo with Santa.

To register for the 2019 St. Joe Santa 5k, which begins at 9 a.m., visit runsignup.com/Race/IL/SaintJoseph/Santa5kRaces.

Packet Pickup will be on Friday, Dec. 20, from 5:00 pm -8:00 pm and Saturday, Dec. 21, 8:00 am – 8:45 am.

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Max Painter continues to grow with MX Electric https://sjodaily.com/2019/09/19/mx-electric/ Thu, 19 Sep 2019 15:03:35 +0000 https://sjodaily.com/?p=4941 BY JESSICA SCHLUTER Max Painter is more than just an electrician. He’s a runner, an Army veteran, a family man, and for the past 18 years, a business owner. Painter is the owner of MX Electric. He opened the business 18 years ago. “We were so small at the beginning […]

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BY JESSICA SCHLUTER

Max Painter is more than just an electrician. He’s a runner, an Army veteran, a family man, and for the past 18 years, a business owner.

Painter is the owner of MX Electric. He opened the business 18 years ago.

“We were so small at the beginning I just ran the office out of my house,” Painter said.

“The last three years we’ve moved into some bigger buildings, but we’ve always rented.”

Over the past 18 years, he has rented office space and storage space in Champaign but now, MX Electric has a permanent place to call home in Ogden

“This building came available, and I said ‘I don’t think it works for me because most of our work is in Champaign’ but then I saw the building and I fell in love with it and I was like ‘I think we’re moving to Ogden!”

Painter grew up in Villa Grove, but for the last 18 years he has been a St. Joseph resident.  He’s excited for a shorter commute to work.

“It’ll be a lot more convenient for me to be able to stay late and work on stuff.”

Painter is renovating the building before moving in. The front area will be offices for him and a few staff members.

The new building is visible from 150 in Ogden and he has already noticed an uptick in interest even though they are not officially moved in there yet. 

“This gets a lot of foot traffic, and people will walk right in. I bet we’ve had 10 people just walk in the door.”

According to Painter, MX Electric does a mix of commercial and residential work. 

Over the last 18 years, the number of employees and the volume of work has ebbed and flowed. 

Painter says he landed a big project at the beginning and it led to quick, but misleading growth.

“I started too big, and I probably had ten employees when I first started.”

“The money was just not there, and I was union at the time and what I was paying my guys- I’m sure I did not make a dime but I felt like I was making a lot of money.” 

“I actually got a pretty big head. I just drove around and didn’t hardly do any work anymore.” 

Painter says the recession was a wake-up call for him.

“Then the recession hit and it about wiped me out. I almost didn’t come back. I’m just lucky I’ve got good friends and good family that helped me out.”

“A lot of people went through a reevaluation at the point. I had to get back to pushing quality at that time.”

MX Electric stayed in business, just with a smaller staff.

“It was just basically me and my brother-in-law and a few other guys for a long time.”

As projects come and go, the number of employees changes but Painter says there have a few core guys who stick around. 

One of those people is his brother-in-law. Painter feels lucky to have someone beside him who treats the business as his own.

“My brother in law has been with me for probably 12 of the 18 years and he is just fantastic.”

Painter enjoys the residential projects just as much as the commercial. 

“We don’t want to completely give up residential. Commercial will come and go with the economy but residential will always be around.”

Painter delegates the commercial bidding to another employee who is skilled at it, but he does a lot of the residential bidding himself.

“We still stay pretty busy with residential. I like meeting new people, I think it’s fantastic.”

“I do a lot of the go out and estimate residential. You just never know who you’re gonna meet.”

The main thing that Painter and his guys try to keep in mind each day is quality.

“Our big thing is quality and cleanup and customer satisfaction.”

 “Electricity is one of those things that you want to feel safe, and if you don’t, we want to make it right.”

“I try to push to my guys to do it right the first time and then we won’t have to go back.”

Painter values customer satisfaction, and he knows the value of local connections and good word-of-mouth. 

“Make good connections, align yourself with the right people.”

He tries to be responsive on community Facebook pages when people are looking for a recommendation for an electrician, or when others recommend him themselves.

“There’s two or three ‘Call Max’ people, and if I see it or get tagged, I’ll respond and ask what we can do to help out.”

Painter has learned a lot in the last 18 years, and he continues to learn.

“I learn something every day, truthfully. A lot of them are hard lessons to learn.”

“I’ve been in business long enough that I know that nothing is a guarantee.”

Painter knows that continued success comes from pushing quality and making sure customers are satisfied. 

“I want you happy. If you’re not happy, we’re not done.”

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