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| | SR0261 | | LRB102 18277 ECR 25969 r |
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1 | | SENATE RESOLUTION
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2 | | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois Senate are saddened |
3 | | to learn of the death of Martin "Marty" Ozinga III, who passed |
4 | | away on April 26, 2021; and
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5 | | WHEREAS, Marty Ozinga earned a degree in psychology at |
6 | | Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Michigan; he was married to |
7 | | his wife, Ruth, for 40 years until her passing in 2010, and |
8 | | together they raised their six sons; and
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9 | | WHEREAS, Marty Ozinga began working for Ozinga, a |
10 | | fourth-generation family business best known for its red and |
11 | | white striped concrete mixer trucks, at age 15; he started as a |
12 | | $1-per-hour laborer in the company's first yard in Evergreen |
13 | | Park; by age 18, he was driving a ready-mix concrete truck for |
14 | | union wages; in 1973, he became general manager at age 23 and, |
15 | | in 1985, succeeded his father as president of Ozinga; along |
16 | | with his cousins Rich and Jim, he led the business through a |
17 | | period of
tremendous growth; this included expanding into the |
18 | | downtown Chicago
market where Ozinga supplied concrete for |
19 | | high-profile projects such as the construction of the new |
20 | | Comiskey Park (now Guaranteed Rate Field), the renovation of |
21 | | Soldier Field, and the production of more than 250,000 cubic |
22 | | yards of concrete for the Dan Ryan Expressway; he most |
23 | | recently served as the chairman of the board of the company; in |