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Village Board Passes Local Cap for Property Taxes Under Home Rule

The tax cap would be the same as the state's, which Clarendon Hills is currently subject to without home rule.

 

The Clarendon Hills Village Board unanimously approved an ordinance Tuesday that would implement a local property tax cap if home rule were attained by the village next month and would require a referendum for any increases that exceed that cap.

The local tax cap would use “the exact same methodology” of the current state tax cap, according to village manager Randy Recklaus: year-over-year property-tax increases would be limited by the prior year’s consumer price index (CPI) or five percent, whichever is less.

Recklaus said that Tuesday’s local tax cap ordinance is a reaction to community concerns with the Village Board’s power under home rule to raise property taxes beyond the state cap with a simple majority vote.

“Many residents have expressed reservations about the loss of the state property tax cap when home rule is attained,” Recklaus said.

Trustee Paul Pedersen said, “Anything we can do to make the residents more comfortable with [home rule], we should do.”

The measure took the place of one that would have required a supermajority board vote for any property-tax increases under home rule, which was discussed at the board’s Feb. 6 meeting. Voters in Clarendon Hills will decide whether or not the village will become a home-rule municipality with a referendum on the March 20 General Primary ballot. 

Tuesday’s ordinance was first introduced publicly at the village’s third home rule informational meeting on Feb. 15 at Prospect School. At the prior two informational meetings, the village had discussed the option under home rule of implementing a capital improvements tax that would have increased the village’s portion of a resident’s property tax bill by 13 cents per $100 of equalized assessed valuation (EAV), a 22 percent increase.

The village is still discussing a one-percent sales tax increase as a revenue raiser that could be implemented with a majority board vote under home rule. That increase, paired with the repeal of the existing one-percent places-for-eating tax on restaurants, would provide the village an additional $100,000 per year according to staff.

While a sales tax increase could be accomplished by its own referendum without home rule, Recklaus has said that home rule could provide additional advantages to the village in economic development as well as protection against the state and some of its unfunded mandates.

“The argument for home rule is that it gives the village operational flexibility that it does not have now,” Recklaus said Tuesday.

Eric Stach, spokesperson for the anti-home-rule group Citizens for Clarendon Hills, said during public comment that the new ordinance does not resolve his group’s concerns because it can be repealed by this board or a future board at any time, it does not protect residents from future sales tax increases, and it does not limit the board’s ability to increase debt under home rule.

“The board has yet to make a coherent, non-shifting argument as to why it seeks home rule power in the first place,” Stach said after noting the village's nixing of the capital improvements tax and $10,000 demolition tax as possible home rule revenue-raisers. “Without a case for home rule, there is simply no need for this ordinance.”

Trustee Ed Reid said the village has been open about its reasoning regarding the attainment of home rule and criticized Citizens for Clarendon Hills, which has promoted its stance by passing out flyers at public meetings and sending emails to residents.

“You’ve brought the politics of cynicism and innuendo and anger,” Reid said. “This is simply a matter of how we feel it’s best to conduct the business of this town. I certainly don’t see that coming from your end. I feel I’m being vilified and attacked.”

While the village has held all three of its scheduled home rule informational meetings, an informal meeting has been scheduled by the Clarendon Hills Public Library for Saturday, March 3 at 10 a.m.

  • Does the local tax cap passed Tuesday make you more comfortable with home rule?

    (Voting has been closed for this question)
    • Yes
        59 (50%)
    • No
        58 (49%)
    Total votes: 117
  • Your vote will only count once. This is not a scientific poll. View Results Vote!
Related Topics: Clarendon Hills, Government, and home rule

John Jasper

7:04 am on Wednesday, February 22, 2012

i attended the meeting and listened as Mr. Stack calmly and simply stated his position of opposition to the Home Rule referendum. i was somewhat shocked at the intensity and duration of Board member Reid's personal attack on Eric Stac following his statements. Obviously disagreement with the Board is not welcomed. Had the situation been reversed, board president Koraba would have undoubtedly and quickly shut off the speaker, Koraba let the attack proceed. It's little wonder citizen attendees are reluctant to speak in opposition to the board for fear of being publically ridiculed and marginalized by those on the bloody pulpit..

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Bill Baum

10:10 am on Wednesday, February 22, 2012

I also attended the Village Meeting and it's my opinion that Mr. Reid's conduct and comments were out of line as a Village Official. Mr. Stach made a meaningful representative presentation and Mr. Reid's comments weren't even about anything in the presentation so it wasn't like 'heat of the moment' comments, Mr. Reid's comments were just plain 'Off the Wall'.

The Clarendon Hills Village Board has been working very hard to make Municipal Home Rule appear acceptable, but, has failed to show purpose, or any new ability, beyond what we have now. Mr. Stach is right, the Village Board has not presented a reasonable case for Home Rule.

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William Schweitzer

12:39 pm on Wednesday, February 22, 2012

It would be best if Mr. Reid does not entertain the prospect of running for Village Board again. We don 't need hotheads like this in public office!

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Mary

2:22 pm on Wednesday, February 22, 2012

I believe these gentlemen missed the point of Mr. Reids comments at the meeting because of course they are members of the "No" group. I heard Mr. Reid defend their rights to disagree with the members of the Village Board but was objecting to the bullying and scare tactics the opposing group has been using. One of these tactics is sending offensive emails to our school children. They have also stooped to insulting the individual Volunteer Board Members, and the Board as a whole. It is obvious that their position is slipping so they feel the need to resort to old school politics. It really is so tiresome. Please attend the Village meetings and visit the Village website to get the facts. Take the time to understand the real issue.

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Larry C

12:01 am on Friday, February 24, 2012

Mary, if you go to www.citizensforCH.com you will not find bullying, insulting or remotely offensive tactics being used by C4CH to debate home rule. I have also received the emails you are referring to and found them to be very objective. Their message has been fact-based, and has remained consistent from the start.

The Village Board has invested considerable time and energy into promoting home rule and appears to be maneuvering it's strategy based on clear and growing public opposition to home rule. I too believe that such a drastic change in the form of governance in Clarendon Hills should not be based on staff supplied, what if scenarios. That's a big 'red flag' for me.

Finally, the ordinance unanimously approved at Tuesday's Village Board meeting seems to be a reach at placating to fence-sitting voters. If the current, or the next Board can simply vote the ordinance out, what comfort should that give the residents of Clarendon Hills? - especially since there is no voice of opposition on the entire Board today.

At the end of the day, home rule really isn't about getting more "tools" and "more control from Springfield", it's about greasing the skids for quick, easy and unlimited property tax increases while maintaining the status quo. Keep in mind that over 95% of Village funding is sourced from property taxes, and that means village property owners are the targets.

Bill Baum

3:12 pm on Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Mary, what makes you believe I'm a member of any group? The Village Board meeting was not the forum for any discussion of complaints, Mr. Reid should take his issues with Mr. Stach directly. The discussion at the time was about the Ordinance. I can appreciate Mr. Reid's frustration, the Village Board never had a specific purpose to utilize Home Rule as a tool and are diligently trying to make it appear acceptable, they are out of reactive changes and it's just not possible to justify Municipal Home Rule, a change of Governance, based on 'if's' and 'what if's'.

I was on the Home Rule Research Committee, please read my letter attached to the committee report, you'll find that I could not find any case study example for Clarendon Hills to base a purpose for Municipal Home Rule.

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Diane Hiller

9:27 am on Thursday, February 23, 2012

I wasn't at that meeting but I know Eric Stach and he is a thoughtful and informed person who has always stayed to the issue. I have never seen anything out of line as far as literature from C4CH. It is their right to express their opinion and bring up questions and doubt about the validity of the villages request for Home Rule. It is the boards responsibility to listen and respond to their fellow community members in an appropriate manner. I hope in the future, that will happen so as not to stifle honest debate of an issue.

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