Lake Land College Renews CPR Training Partnership with Illinois Department of Corrections
Lake Land College Board of Trustees Meeting | September, 2025
Article Summary: The Lake Land College board approved a new four-year agreement to continue providing CPR and First Aid training for the Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC). The college will partner with To The Rescue CPR, LLC of Fairview Heights to deliver the “Heartsaver” program to IDOC personnel across the state.
IDOC Training Agreement Key Points:
-
The board approved a four-year agreement with the IDOC to provide CPR training, running from September 8, 2025, to June 30, 2029.
-
A concurrent four-year contract was approved with To The Rescue CPR, LLC to serve as the training provider.
-
The college anticipates generating approximately $44,750 in annual instructional revenue from the partnership.
The Lake Land College Board of Trustees on Monday, September 8, 2025, solidified its long-standing relationship with the Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC) by approving a new four-year training agreement. The college will continue to provide CPR and First Aid certification, known as the Heartsaver program, for IDOC staff through June 30, 2029.
To facilitate the training, the board also approved a concurrent four-year agreement with To The Rescue CPR, LLC, a Fairview Heights-based company that will deliver the American Heart Association-certified instruction. The college solicited bids for the service and received one proposal from To The Rescue CPR.
According to a memo from John Woodruff, Vice President for Business Services, the college conservatively anticipates recognizing $44,750 in annual instructional revenue from the IDOC contract. Under the agreement with the provider, To The Rescue CPR’s costs will not exceed 85% of the revenue booked, ensuring a cash-positive arrangement for the college. The contracts do not include volume guarantees but are based on IDOC’s projected training needs. The board approved both agreements unanimously.
Latest News Stories
Illinois Quick Hits: State unemployment rate remains more than 5%
Arthur hammers Louisiana; flood threat persists along Gulf Coast
Report: More than 1M Minnesotans could face Social Security cuts by 2032
Democrats like Schumer, back Platner’s scandal-riddled Senate bid
Chicago discards proposed ban on unregulated ‘sweepstakes machines’
Democrats spend millions in attempt to unseat Boebert
Vance: Iran deal ‘win-win’ for Americans, conditioned on Iran’s behavior
Wisconsin Supreme Court rules against race-based scholarships
Legislator calls for investigation of Newsom’s FOIA request
EXCLUSIVE: Social Security reform imperative to avoid 34% tax hike, insolvency by 2032
Property tax rates remain a top issue in Wisconsin elections
Taxpayers paying $50 million+ for Chicago-owned bus station