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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 Robert "Bob" Ontiveros, who passed |
4 | | away on February 8, 2022; and
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5 | | WHEREAS, Bob Ontiveros was born to John and Josephine |
6 | | Ontiveros on August 17, 1938; he attended Moline High School, |
7 | | where he excelled at wrestling, track and field, and |
8 | | basketball;
following his high school graduation, he studied |
9 | | at the University of Cincinnati for one year followed by one |
10 | | year at Moline Community College, now Black Hawk College; he |
11 | | married Blenda Crummer in 1960; and
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12 | | WHEREAS, Bob Ontiveros started his professional career as |
13 | | a sales representative for Dunn & Bradstreet (D&B); after a |
14 | | few years, he began working for the R.V. Evans Company, a small |
15 | | industrial packaging startup out of Decatur and the local |
16 | | dealer for Paslode pneumatic nail guns; he was given the sales |
17 | | territory of north central Illinois and eastern Iowa; and
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18 | | WHEREAS, After watching the industry grow for seven years, |
19 | | Bob Ontiveros and his wife saw an opportunity to start their |
20 | | own business; supported by a few local investors, they founded |
21 | | Bi-State Packaging in 1974; their team, including their two |
22 | | sons, transformed Bi-State Packaging into a multifaceted |
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1 | | business enterprise respected throughout North America for its |
2 | | packaging solutions, supply chain services, and incentive |
3 | | marketing programs; their company is now called Group O; under |
4 | | his leadership as CEO, Group O has grown into one of the |
5 | | largest Hispanic-owned businesses in the U.S. and one of the |
6 | | largest employers in the Quad Cities, with revenues of over |
7 | | $500 million, more than 1,000 employees, and operations in |
8 | | Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Mexico; he retired as CEO |
9 | | and became chairman of the company in 1999; and
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10 | | WHEREAS, Bob Ontiveros, along with his wife, developed |
11 | | Community Health Care, Familia Dental, and the Boys and Girls |
12 | | Clubs of the Mississippi Valley; he founded the Greater Quad |
13 | | Cities Hispanic Chamber of Commerce in 2008; with his son |
14 | | Christopher and granddaughter Maria, he founded the nonprofit |
15 | | Mercado on Fifth in 2016; and
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16 | | WHEREAS, Bob Ontiveros served as chairman of the Quad |
17 | | Cities Civic Center Authority Board from 1996 to 2003; he |
18 | | previously served on Augustana's Board of Trustees along with |
19 | | many other local, state, and national organizations; and
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20 | | WHEREAS, Bob Ontiveros was a dedicated philanthropist and |
21 | | supported many organizations throughout the Quad Cities, |
22 | | including the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) |
23 | | chapters in Davenport and Moline, Moline schools, Niabi Zoo, |
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1 | | Scott Community College, WQPT PBS, and WVIK Quad Cities NPR; |
2 | | he was also a major supporter of Fourth Wall Films' efforts to |
3 | | produce documentaries about Hero Street U.S.A. in Silvis; and |
4 | | WHEREAS, Bob Ontiveros and his wife created numerous |
5 | | endowed scholarship funds for Hispanic students, making a |
6 | | $100,000 gift to Augustana College for that purpose in 2016; |
7 | | they donated $1 million to their alma mater Black Hawk College |
8 | | in 2020, becoming the institution's largest gift to date; and
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9 | | WHEREAS, Bob Ontiveros was named one of six State of |
10 | | Illinois Lincoln Award honorees in 2013; he received an |
11 | | Outstanding Community Leadership Award from the State of |
12 | | Illinois Comptroller, a Legacy Award from the U.S. Department |
13 | | of Commerce, and Lifetime Achievement Awards from the National |
14 | | Minority Supplier Development Council, the Chicago Minority |
15 | | Business Development Council, and Negocios Now; he was |
16 | | inducted into the Minority Business Hall of Fame, the Black |
17 | | Hawk College Alumni Hall of Fame, the Junior Achievement of |
18 | | the Heartland Business Hall of Fame, and the Jeremiah Milbank |
19 | | Society; he received an Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters |
20 | | from Western Illinois University and an honorary doctorate |
21 | | from Augustana College; he and his wife received the honor of |
22 | | the Boys and Girls Clubs of the Mississippi Valley's Teen |
23 | | Center in Moline being renamed the Robert & Blenda Ontiveros |
24 | | Teen Center in 2019; and |
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1 | | WHEREAS, Bob Ontiveros loved selling things; he enjoyed |
2 | | traveling the world, cycling, running, snowmobiling, boating, |
3 | | skiing, playing handball, and golfing at Oakwood Country Club |
4 | | and Short Hills Country Club in the Quad Cities and Longboat |
5 | | Key Club in Longboat Key, Florida; he exercised daily, |
6 | | maintained connections with longtime friends through daily |
7 | | emails and phone calls, and relished time with his family, |
8 | | including his grandchildren and great-grandchildren; and
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9 | | WHEREAS, Bob Ontiveros was preceded in death by his |
10 | | parents and his siblings, Maria Elena, Lawrence, Rita, and |
11 | | Steven; and
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12 | | WHEREAS, Bob Ontiveros is survived by his siblings, John |
13 | | (Laura), Frank (Lorna), Christine (Jeff) Reem, Joanne (Ray) |
14 | | Bender, Michael, and Cindy (Dave) Newton; his sons, |
15 | | Christopher (Pamela) and Gregg; his grandchildren, Maria (Jack |
16 | | Cullen), Allie, Dana, Will, Josie, and Kendall; and his |
17 | | great-grandchildren, Emma, Stella, and Anna Catherine; |
18 | | therefore, be it
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19 | | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE ONE HUNDRED SECOND GENERAL |
20 | | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we mourn the passing of |
21 | | Robert "Bob" Ontiveros and extend our sincere condolences to |
22 | | his family, friends, and all who knew and loved him; and be it |