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Two Tax Hike Questions on Ballot of McHenry High School District 156 Taxpayers

March 26, 2013 By: Cal Skinner Category: Bond Issue, Bond Referendum, McHenry High School Board, McHenry High School District 156, Referendum

Not only does the McHenry area have a ten cents per $100 of assessed value referendum on the ballot to create a new countywide taxing district the $9 million proceeds (first year’s estimate tax take) of which will go to help developmentally disadvantaged individuals, but there’s a $2.2 million bond issue, too.

Here's the referendum question that McHenry High School District voters will face.

Here’s the referendum question that McHenry High School District voters will face.

In its February newsletter, the District explains,

“This opportunity would provide the district the ability to reinvest $2.2 million in interest savings. The savings generated will be spent on technology and necessary capital improvements, in particular, additional safety and security measures.”

Further,

“None of the money will be used for school administrator or teacher salaries. All of the money generated will be used for technology and capital improvements which include safety and security.

“If the question is unsuccessful, taxpayers who own a $200,000 home will see an average refund of $14.00 per year in the bond and interest portion of their tax bill over the next eight‐year payback period.

“If the question is successful, taxpayers will see no increase in the bond and interest portion of their tax bill.”

Details on planned expenditures can be found here.

McHenry’s “Tyvek Tower”

April 05, 2011 By: Cal Skinner Category: Condo, McHenry, McHenry High School Board, McHenry High School District 156, Ned Neumann, RiverWalk

A comment showed up from long-time public official (McHenry High School Board) Ned Neumann that covers a topic I’ve been interested in but haven’t gotten around to writing about.

Municipalities along the Fox River have gotten in big financial trouble subsidizing housing overlooking the river. The first I noticed was Elgin. Then came McHenry with its RiverWalk, built where the old McHenry Hospital was located.

McHenry RiverWalk from Curtis Commercial web site.

Neumann says the building is up, but the planning was so poor that there isn’t a parking place for each condo.

Here’s Neumann’s commentary:

Cal-

You’ll remember me from forty years ago when I was on the McHenry High School Board, eventually for eighteen years.

You’ve given a lot of coverage lately to the “three in a row” candidates and their opposition to the eight million dollar tax increase being voted on Tuesday, April 5.

You’re right and they are right.

As much of the current Board as possible should be replaced and the tax increase should not be approved, the problem is; there’s a much bigger story in McHenry right now.

McHenry’s equivalent of Algonquin’s Tyvek Tower continues to be a joke. It’s primarily a residential condominium complex that has grossly inadequate parking.

The failed Algonquin condo project overlooking the Fox River and Downtown

Not even one spot for each condo, no spots for the twelve stores or restaurant, no spots for a store owner or their employees, none for a guest or customer.

Problem is: the building is mostly done and some occupancy in place.

It, the building, will survive.

The question is: survive as what?

People with a hundred, or several hundred thousand dollars to spend aren’t going to buy in a building without adequate parking.

Nobody has bought in four and a half years of effort.

The few who had contracts walked away when the parking got diminished by the City Council to help the developer survive.

Since then the bank took it back, entered into a contract for its sale to a group that is requesting the City to change the developer agreement to allow them to convert it into a rental complex.

The City gave two million dollars of incentive for the developer to build a ten million dollar owner occupied residential complex and some commercial space.

Seventy five percent of it residential units.

A four story low income or Section 8 rental complex will have nowhere near the value to justify two million dollars of incentives.

We have many low income rental properties, one or more in each of our other downtowns.

We may need more.

Certainly not as the crown jewel of our RiverWalk in the absolute center of our town.

Algonquin is lucky.

Their Tyvek Tower will either be finished according to its original plan or torn down.

McHenry’s will either be finished according to its original plan or diminished into a low income rental complex, the tenants of which somehow function without cars.

There’s talk of a special City Council meeting on April 11 with the only topic on the agenda being RiverWalk Center.

The contract purchaser group speaks freely of their request for conversion to a rental complex.

The City Council has previously caved in and gave in to whatever absurd request the out-of-towner high rollers requested.

I wonder what they’ll do this time.

I hope you pay attention. Keep up the good work. Regards!!

Ned Neumann

No McHenry High School Candidate Favors Consolidation Grade Schools with High School District

March 18, 2011 By: Cal Skinner Category: Consolidation, Harrison Grade School District 36, Illinois League of Women Voters, McHenry, McHenry Elementary School District 15, McHenry Grade School, McHenry Grade School District 15, McHenry High School Board, McHenry High School District 156, Pat Quinn, School, Wonder Lake

First to answer the consolidation question, Beth Taylor nailed the reason for opposition.

There were two questions about consolidation of high school and grade school districts at the McHenry High School Board candidates night sponsored by the McHenry County League of Women Voters Wednesday night.

Beth Taylor’s reply to the first question, which focused on possible administrative savings:

“The wage adjustments outweigh administrative savings by 8-10 times.”

Steven White pointed out there are “significant differences in average salary between elementary and high school salaries that would eliminate (any administrative savings).”

The League of Women Votrers moderator at the candidates' night.

Incumbent Board member Mellody Ahrens agreed. “We would have a big salary increase…”

“Consolidation doesn’t seem to be a good idea,” agreed Timothy Byers. “It would cost the district a great deal of money.”

The other candidates made similar remarks.

All had compared the costs of raising elementary school teachers to the higher level of high school teachers and decided it wasn’t a good idea.

Then, the moderator asked for a “Yes,” “No” answer on the topic of consolidation, evoking Governor Pat Quinn’s name.

Both candidates supported by the teachers union and those supported by the taxpaying public opposed consolitation of local grade schools with the high school district.

“No,” “No,” “No,” “No,” “No,” “No,” “No,”

said the seven candidates present.

Besides the ones mentioned above, the others in attendance were Steve Bellmore, Tracy Simon and Darnell Qualls.

Missing the meeting were Alexandra Coy and Daniel Koruna.

Why two questions when the answers to the first question were all negative?

I can only image that the Illinois League of Women Voters favors the bill that would bust the budgets of taxpayers on the eastern side of McHenry County where there are not unit districts. (I emailed the state League early Thursday morning asking whether it had taken a position on the legislation, but my email went unanswered.)

Tomorrow, the math.

How McHenry High School Board Candidates Line Up on the Referendum

March 16, 2011 By: Cal Skinner Category: Beth Taylor, Darnell Qualls, McHenry, McHenry High School Board, McHenry High School District 156, Mellody Ahrens, Referendum, Steve Bellmore, Steven White, Timothy Byers, Tracy Simon

Seven of nine candidates on the ballot for the McHenry High School Board showed up the League of Women Voters candidates night.

Incumbent Mellody Ahrens

Tracy Simon

The McHenry County League of Women Voters held a candidates’ night for the McHenry High School Board Wednesday night at McHenry East High School.

Steven White

There was too much covered to spell it all out, but the most important question was how candidates planned to vote on the tax hiking referendum.

Three candidates favored the measure.

The first is the incumbent up for re-election, Mellody Ahrens.

The members of the blue and white yard sign slate do, too.

They are Tracy Simon and Stephen White.

All the rest who participated said they plan to vote “No”.

Steve Bellmore

 

  • Steve Bellmore
  • Timothy Byers
  • Beth Taylor

Timothy Byers

In addition, Darnell Qualls said he was an opponent to the referendum.

Two people listed on the ballot didn’t show up.

Beth Taylor

They are Alexandra Coy and Daniel Koruna.

Darnell Qualls

The missing two are, respectively, the second and last on the ballot.

Being first on a long ballot like this provides about a ten percent advantage. Being last or second has been show to add about five percent to one’s vote totals.

Two McHenry High School Board Candidates Address Wonder Lake Voters

March 13, 2011 By: Cal Skinner Category: Beth Taylor, McHenry, McHenry Citizens Tax Watch, McHenry High School Board, McHenry High School District 156, Steve Bellmore, Strike, Teacher, Teacher Contract, Teacher Layoffs, Teacher Negotiations, Teacher Pay, Teacher Salaries, Teacher Strike, Teachers Union, Wonder Lake

David Yang sits at the head table in front of a "Don't Tread on Me" flag.

McHenry Citizens Tax Watch, a new group springing out of Wonder Lake founded by Bob Anderson and David Yang, held a meeting Sunday afternoon at Christ the King Catholic Church.

It was a bifurcated one featuring National Taxpayers United of Illinois’ Jim Tobin and his daughter Christina, now a Vice President of her father’s group, plus two candidates for the McHenry High School Board.

I’ll concentrate on the latter today, since defeat of the high school’s referendum next month is one of the reasons the group was founded.

Wonder Lake's Bob Anderson led the meeting.

Anderson, who moderated the meeting in back of a Vote NO yard sign, told the audience that the group was concentrating on not only

 

  • defeating this second time around attempt to hike taxes (after a 73% loss last fall), but also
  • convincing legislators not to allow such repeat referendums, plus
  • ending the right of teachers to strike and
  • supporting the “3 in a Row” slate, all of whose candidates “have assured me they won’t support the tax increase.”

“I’ll be supporting them,” Anderson declared.

Beth Taylor and Steve Bellmore, two members of the “3 in a Row” slate, gave opening statements and answered questions.

Let me give you a flavor of what went on.

Steven Bellmore

First Bellmore:

“When the School Board threatened to cut Advanced Placement, extra curricular, co-curricular and sports, I said, ‘Enough is enough!’

“We’ve had money in there to the tune of $25 million that’s basically disappeared.”

He argued for more transparency, decrying “their lack of candidness with the community.”

“You can’t spend money you don’t have,” he added.

Taylor explained,

Beth Taylor

“I got fired up to run about the same time Steve did.”

She told of attending a meeting called by the School Board last fall where four choices were outlined.

“The School Board chose the third worst.  It would have made high school a miserable experience.

“They sprang it without warning.

“Where are we going to be two to three years from now?”

Asked about what concessions the group was seeking, mention in the pamphlet published here Sunday, Bellmore said they would be looking to both the administration and teachers.

He pointed out that salaries had gone up 48% over five years in McHenry, while fringe benefits had increased 59%.

Bellmore compare that to salary increases of 18% in Johnsburg and 8% in Richmond-Burton. Fringe benefit increases there had been 9% and 4% over the five year period.

‘Why the disparity?” he asked.

So what concessions does he seek?

“A three-year hard freeze on salaries and concessions on benefits.”

Bellmore said that McHenry High School teachers paid nothing for their own health insurance and their families got an 85% subsidy.

Steve Bellmore holds up "3 in a Row" yard sign. Beth Taylor is on his left and Bob Anderson can be seen in the background.

That compares to Crystal Lake District 155′s 100% payment of teacher health benefits and 50% for family coverage. In Johnsburg and Richmond, teachers have to pay 15% of their own health insurance cost and all of their family’s coverage.

“Is this going to balance the budget?

“No. It’s a start.

“Is there a need for scalebacks for classes and extra-curriculars?

“Probably,” but he noted, “They’ve already made scalebacks.”

Bellmore talked about meetings of the current school board:
“You go to these meetings and you get no answers.”

About future tax hikes: “If you want to pass a referendum, you need to communicate with (the community first).

“Right now, if we don’t have the money, you don’t spend it.”

At this point, Anderson asked,

“Are you going to be voting, ‘No?’”

Beth Taylor holds up the "3 in a Row" slate's pamhlet, which was published on McHenry County Blog, Sunday, March 13th.

Both Bellmore and Taylor answered, “Yes.”

Anderson revealed that he had talked to the third member of the slate, Timothy Byers, and he had made the same commitment.

“Everyone’s done with less,” Bellmore added. “I’m down 60% in my business.

“Teachers are important. I think the teachers here are quality.”

An audience member asked about the four options offered by the school board last fall.

Taylor explained that the worst was to close East High School and put the students on double shifts at West.

“Option three would have had an open campus at lunch with twenty-five teachers down,” she continued.

“They would be late, if they came back at all.”

She added that there would be no dances and rattled off a list of other extracurricular activities that would have disappeared.

The audience members pointed out that businessmen were regularly making 5-10% concessions.

A man asked whether any of the options had anything about concessions.

“The concessions on the salary end are cutting this many teachers,” Taylor said.

“It’s get rid of the new ones, the ones with fire in their bellies.”

A man observed that in the business world “people are taking 5-10% concessions.”

Taylor said, “The problem is that a lot of teachers are married to teachers. They are living in a bubble (isolated from what’s happening to other families).”

Someone wondered if negotiations might result in a strike.

“Possibly,” Taylor replied.

“If they refuse concessions, there may be a strike” Bellmore said. “There’s a lot of people out of work out there…We need a strong school board.

“In my mind, I’m watching out for the kids first. If you build trust with the community, you’re going to have trust with the community.”

McHenry East High School from the street where the new TIF-subsidized condominiums were built.

There was a question about the East High School’s new gym being built one-foot short. The implication from the audience was that this was a deliberate attempt to make East easier to close.

Taylor reacted by pointing out the absurdity of the state’s requiring 8o acres for new schools.

“I don’t think a new school makes smarter kids.”

Bellmore pointed out that since 2005 the district has added only 100 students, but hired 33 new staff. He did not know how many staff had left during that time, he admitted.

After the meeting, I asked Taylor about her having had a “Vote Yes” sign in front of her home last fall.

She told me she had two children in high school and was horrified at what the school board had proposed.

“I was thinking with my heart, not my head.”

The clear implication was that she was following her head this time around and it led her to the positions she enunciated.

Anti-Referendum McHenry High School Board Candidates Make Self Known

March 13, 2011 By: Cal Skinner Category: Beth Taylor, McHenry, McHenry High School Board, McHenry High School District 156, School, School Board, Steve Bellmore, Timothy Byers

Three candidates have banded together to advance their candidacies for the McHenry County School Board.

McHenry County Blog obtained a copy of the “Citizens for Fiscal Responsibility” pamphlet, plus a card that is being passed around.

Although it is not written in large print, there is a statement on the front of the brochure stating,

WE DO NOT SUPPORT THE
$8 MILLION BOND
REFERENDUM WITHOUT SIGNIFICANT MONETARY
CONCESSIONS

Obviously, this statement could be stronger, but there certainly won’t be “significant monetary concessions” by the teachers union.

So for the present election, this slate has obviously concluded that being against the referendum enhances its chance for success.

Here’s the complete front page of the pamphlet:

Front of the “VOTE 3 IN A ROW” slate pamphlet.

Look inside and you’ll see this flap declaring the three to be “highly qualified candidates” who “will work together to stabilize finances of the district and attain a balanced budget. We see concessions as the only way to balance this budget…”

Click to enlarge any image.

There’s a commitment to maintain “a comprehensive high school experience…as well as extra-curricular activities…(to retain) the overall quality of life for our community.”

Inside, each candidate gets a panel:

Candidates Beth Taylor, Steve Bellmore and Timothy Byers have biographies inside. Click to enlarge.

And, on the back is another quality of life pitch, as well as one for votes.

But, that’s not the only campaign hand out.

There are also thick yellow cards with the candidates’ names on one side and the issue summarized on the other:

Issues emphasized are a balanced budget, well-rounded education and quality of life.

There is no mention of opposition to the referendum here.

Considering the lack of color coordination in the two campaign pieces, it is conceivable they were prepared separately.

Other candidates who would like a similar story are invited to email their literature to calskinner2@gmail.com.

McHenry High School District Finally Puts Teacher Contract on the Internet…Sort Of

March 10, 2011 By: Cal Skinner Category: Contract, McHenry High School Board, McHenry High School District 156, Teacher Contract, Teacher Pension, Teacher Salaries, Teachers Retirement System, Web Site

Since at least August 13, 2009, school districts have been mandated to post their contracts with teachers online.

So, you can imagine my surprise when I discovered that McHenry High School District 156′s teacher contract was not posted.

That’s been the law at least since this Public Act 96-0434 was signed on August 13, 2009, maybe even before since the 95th legislative session was before the 96th.

Per Section 10-20.40 of this Code, as added by Public Act 95-707, a school district must post the contract that a school board enters into with an exclusive bargaining representative. The school board must provide the terms of that contract online.

When I asked the district, this is the reply I received,

“According to our Regional office our contract does not have to be posted on our website.  If you are requesting a copy we can mail it to you.”

I called the Regional Superintendent of Education’s Office, pointed out the law and passed on the information that District 156 was using its authority as justification not to post the contract.

Later yesterday afternoon, I was informed,

“We were able to get the document scanned so attached is the teachers’ contract…sorry for the poor copy of the front cover.  It is also going to be posted on our website this afternoon.”

With a large tax hike referendum on the ballot April 2, I started looking at the contract to see why the school board might not want to make it readily available.

With all the talk about pensions, I looked at the Retirement section on pages 32 and 33.

Here’s what I found:

This is the section of the collective bargaining contract signed by McHenry High School District 156 Board of Education that commits taxpayers to paying the teachers' share of their pension payment.

In case you can’t read it in the image, here’s what it says:

The Teachers Retirement System pamphlet says that teachers have to pay 9.4% of their salaries to finance their pensions.

“The board will contribute a portion of each teacher’s compensation to the Illinois Teachers’ Retirement System.  This contribution is included as part of the total teacher’s salary as shown on the compensation schedule (Appendices A, B and C) and the extra-curricular schedule.

“The amount of the contribution will equal 9.4% of the teacher’s compensation as above described.

“The individual teacher will have no right or claim to these funds except as they become available upon retirement or resignation from the Teachers’ Retirement System.  Contributions paid directly by the Board to the Teachers’ Retirement System, under these provisions, will not be included in the teacher’s W-2 Form for federal or state income tax purposes pursuant to Section 414(h) of the Internal Revenue Code.

What’s that mean?

It says that teachers don’t pay anything for their pensions.

Taxpayers pick up the whole tab.

I was able to find the whole contract by typing “teacher contract” in the District’s web site search engine.

But, guess what?

I couldn’t download the contract from the web site.

"The document must be approved before downloading."

A message popped up saying,

The document must be approved before downloading.

That’s not the way I read the law.

How about you?

Candidates Withdraw from Local Races

March 09, 2011 By: Cal Skinner Category: Barrington Hills, Candidate, Lakewood, McHenry High School Board, McHenry High School District 156, Withdrawal, Wonder Lake, Woodstock Fire Department, Woodstock Fire/Rescue District

There were not many contested races in the April 5, 2011, election to start with, but there are fewer now.

In the Village of Barrington Hills, Trustee candidate Dawn Davis has withdrawn.

Blake Hobson, appointed to fill a vacancy, is no longer in the running for Village of Lakewood Trustee.

Likewise Dennis Palys, who ran unsuccessfully as a Democrat for the McHenry County Board, has dropped his candidacy for Village of Wonder Lake Trustee.

In the contest for Woodstock Fire/Rescue District Trustee, Stephen Jagman withdrew.

Four people have climbed out of the candidate pool for the McHenry High School Board. This pool is at McHenry West High School.

But the real withdrawal story is in the 13-person race for the McHenry High School District 156 Board of Education. Four people withdrew:

  • Marybeth Varvil
  • Donald Cichoski
  • Paul A Stevens
  • Joseph W Meyer