Harvey resident Lizzie Welch-Aguiniga says she gave up on schools being support systems for children by the time she was 13.
The oldest of 11 children raised by a mother struggling with drug addiction, Welch-Aguiniga says she reported the regular mental, physical and sexual abuse she and her siblings faced to anyone who would listen.
âI would go to school, and I told the teachers, I told the principal â I told everybody in the school that I could possibly tell,â Welch-Aguiniga said. âNobody did anything.â
Welch-Aguiniga said once her situation was finally reported to the state Department of Children and Family Services, she was moved from Chicagoâs South Side to a foster home in Harvey, where she also suffered abuse at the hands of her caregiver.
âEvery day she was locking us in the basement with no water,â Welch-Aguiniga recalled. âI went to the school and told the principal, but it turns out that the principal was good friends with her, and he called her and told her everything ⊠And it just made things worse.â
Now 29, Welch-Aguiniga is seeking a 2-year seat on the West Harvey Dixmoor District 147 Board, which she says hasnât done enough to support her children and the many others who attend the districtâs three schools.
Sheâs running as part of an all-women slate that hopes to bring fresh perspectives to the board that governs the Lincoln Early Learning Center, Martin Luther King Elementary and Rosa Parks Middle School.
Welch-Aguiniga will face Kenneth Henderson, who was appointed to the board in November, and Quandra Craig in seeking a 2-year term on the board.
However, the rest of her slate, Asucena Gutierrez, Sharron McGee and longtime board member Bonnie Rateree, are running for 4-year terms.They face incumbents Michael Smith, Pamela Cudjo and Mable Chapman, all of whom did not respond to requests for comment, and Evelyn D. Young and Ericka Butler.
âSet in their waysâ
As raids by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement began under President Donald Trump, community members expressed concerns about how the school board handled a teacherâs targeted comment about potential deportations.
Community members reported last month that one teacher at Rosa Parks Middle School, during class, held up a newspaper with a story about deportations and said to students, âI canât wait for this to happen.â Since then, they say she has laughed in the face of students expressing fear over ICE raids.
Welch-Aguiniga said the board did not take any disciplinary action against the teacher, demonstrating a lack of support for the districtâs large population of Hispanic students. During a meeting Feb. 3, the board approved districtwide immigration guidelines, with interim Superintendent Creg Williams reassuring parents federal immigration officials will not be allowed to enter any schools without a warrant.
âWe understand the anxiety from some parents and some community members â even from some family and friends of mine,â Williams said. âSome days they donât want to send children to school, but we need to let our community know that their children are safe here. We are not allowing people to come into our buildings and just interview or pull students out.â

He said the district is working to tighten security and said that will continue to ensure all visitors go through a process that includes automatic background checks.
The population of District 147 is 36% Hispanic or Latino, with 14% of people speaking English âless than well,â according to 2018 to 2022 data from the National Center for Education Statistics. The communityâs median household income hovers around $37,000, the dashboard says.
Welch-Aguiniga says the district has consistently failed to include Hispanic students and parents the same way they do others. At the Feb. 3 meeting, she addressed the board on behalf of another parent who was not fluent in English.
âThis is a very diverse district â there should be translators for her,â Welch-Aguiniga said.
As board member, she hopes to improve communication to all parents and create more opportunities for them to get involved with their childrenâs education. She also plans to advocate for students with disabilities, as her own son has autism.
âWe want the parents and the kids to look at the board and see themselves,â Welch-Aguiniga said. âI think the problem with this board is theyâve been there for years ⊠and, you know, they might be set in their ways. Itâs time for somebody younger with a more open mind to come in and start taking the ideas from the parents.â
âBecause we give them ideas,â Welch-Aguiniga added. âWe tell them stuff â itâs just not getting done.â
Current board members
The newest member on the District 147 Board, Henderson, should be ineligible to hold office due to having two felony convictions, according to state statute. Welch-Aguiniga and others at board meetings have raised concerns about Hendersonâs appointment and asked for his removal.
Henderson was found guilty of felony possession of a controlled substance in 2009 and felony aggravated use of a weapon in 2015. After being elected to the Harvey Park Board in 2019, he was barred from holding office due to the convictions.
He was later elected to the District 147 Board, where he served from 2019 to 2023 without objection. Neither Henderson nor other board members responded to the Daily Southtownâs requests for comment.
Rateree, the districtâs longest serving board member, said the board is aware of Hendersonâs criminal record but chose to seat him to maintain a strong voting block. She is unaware if any complaints about him serving made it to the Cook County stateâs attorneyâs office or elsewhere.
Rateree chose to break away from the other members seeking reelection and join the slate of women because she âwants to see board members who love our children.â
She said in a statement that as the board searches for a new superintendent, she is confident that Welch-Aguiniga, McGee and Gutierrez will âunselfishly fight for these babies.â
âIt may seem simplistic, but unless our leaders and professionals care about Black and brown children, they will only be concerned about their careers,â Rateree said. âI am supporting these young women because they care enough to stand up for our childrenâs future just when I was about to give up.â
The next West Harvey Dixmoor Board meeting will be at 7 p.m. on Monday at 191 W. 155th Place in Harvey, according to the district website.



