Tax District Officials Will Say, “Oh, Bleep!” When They Read This

A funny thing happened on the way to the end of the calendar year.

The Consumer Price Index has been decreasing.

It’s still up 1.1% for the last twelve months.

That is probably enough to earn an

“Oh, BLEEP!”

from many tax district officials.

Why?

The “Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U): U.S. city average” is the percentage increase (until now) upon which the property tax cap is based.

This coming year, tax districts are allowed an increase in their “tax take” of 4.1%, plus new construction.

But look what is happening since August. It’s on the table below:

The cost of living was the same in September as it was in August.

From September to October, however, it decreased a seasonally adjusted 1%.

And from October to November, the seasonally adjusted CPI fell 1.7% more.

That’s good news for consumers, but very bad news of tax districts.

Will the CPI fall more than 1.1% from November to December?

Will the schools, non-home rule villages, junior colleges, townships, fire protection districts, park districts, etc., get no increase whatsoever in property taxes collected in 2010?

Will their friends in the General Assembly change the tax cap law?

Will that offer legislative challengers the opportunity to label supporters of gutting the tax cap the title of “tax hiker?”

Stay tuned for the “sturm und angst.” (And, no, I don’t know how to lay in an umlaut above the “u” in “sturm.”)

And the tip for this story? It came from CPA and Nunda Township Supervisor John Heisler.

For those in the Chicago metropolitan area, here is a press release telling what happened locally in the last month.

Snow Blower Time

It’s mid-December and I have shoveled our moderately long driveway what, eight times?

I’m getting tired and winter has hardly begun.

When my wife told me that it was going to snow 7-10 inches today, I finally decided to get out the old snow plow.

I had it repaired when we were were first married 18 years ago.

I haven’t used it since.

It’s been stored so far in the back of the garage my wife didn’t even know we owned a snow blower (or do you spell it “snowblower.”)

I figure snow shoveling is my winter exercise.

So, I called Mike Wonnacott, a friend of my computer guy, Richard Rowland. They both live pretty close to me in southwestern Crystal Lake.

He drove over in his snow-covered pick-up truck and we loaded the Sears Craftsman snow blower.

Now, unfortunately, I have insufficient forethought to have had it tuned up before.

So, I shall be shoveling snow several times more tonight and tomorrow.

If you would like small motor repair, including lawn mowers, Mike Wonnacott’s phone number is 847-477-4917.

He’s an airline mechanic in his real job. He calls the other one

“The Mower Medic”

And my wife got a bonus.

I come from a long line of pack rats. My grandfather Roy Skinner build a poll barn in Crumpton, Maryland, to keep his stuff in after he retired, for instance.

Both my mother and father saved stuff. Lots of it is still down in the basement, along with too much of my “stuff.”

The most disorganized part of my “stuff” is what came when I cleaned out the legislative office in late 2000 and early 2001. It’s still taking up space in the half part of our 2½ garage.

Yesterday I got rid of a whole box (not a big deal to anyone but me).

So, let it snow.

By next week, I’ll be ready for the white stuff.

The lawn mower is back in the corner where the snow blower used to be, so there’s a convenient place to store the machine that will make my arms and back feel less tired.

And, after I finish tonight, I can look forward to a nice hot bath.

Got to finish “The Venetian Betrayal” by Steve Berry.

Message of the Day – A Tee Shirt

Usually I can’t tell you where to buy a tee shirt that becomes a “Message of the Day.”

Not so with

LIQUIDATE
YOUR
ASSETS

Invest in the future with beer money!
MILWAUKEE * WISC

I found this at a shop at Milwaukee’s Mitchell Airport.

With Ponzi scheme czar Bernard Madolff having made off with $50 billion and the SEC clueless, beer seems to be at least as an attractive investment as his hedge fund. At least you know that you won’t get anything from beer but a buzz.

Blago Star Wars

When I saw the Chicago Tribune headline yesterday,

Blagojevich
Strikes Back

I thought Star Wars.

Not knowing the plot as well as my son, I had to ask my son whether the Empire represented good or bad.

“Bad,” was the immediate answer.

So there’s no contest of what character should represent Rod Blagojevich:

Darth Vader

And where would I find a photo of Darth Vader?

I looked to see if I took one at Disney World.

Guess I didn’t get close enough.

Now, I know it was not Rod Blagojevich in the costume.

I doubt Blagojevich has ever been in McHenry County, except maybe to get to Rockford for the first 2002 gubernatorial debate, which he and GOP candidate Jim Ryan conspired to exclude me. (Part of the Tollway goes through the southwestern edge of McHenry County.)

So, just think of it as a representation of concept.

Now, the clone warriors, because of the recent cartoon movie, “Star Wars: The Clone Wars,” I know are good guys.

Maybe they represent Illinois state representatives.

Maybe they will take Darth Vader out of our universe before he does more evil.

Sparkling Art Crystal Christmas Presents

If you are unsure what to get a loved one, but want to make it special, may I suggest visiting the home of Kurt Strobach?

The Czechoslovakian-born glass cutter lives in Crystal Lake’s Coventry a block west of Canterbury School at 855 Teverton. Best to call first. His number is 815-459-7377.

Strobach uses techniques that you won’t find in commercial crystal.

His wheels turn toward him.

OSHA would definitely not approve.

While the mass manufacturers dip their cut crystal into acid baths to get rid of the burrs, Strobach uses an emery wheel.

The result from Strobach’s method is a much sharper cut, which brings more brilliance to his pieces than I’ve seen in any other crystal.

Waterford just does not compare to Strobach’s work.

Prices range from the $20-$30 area to several hundred dollars. The one you see Strobach holding at the top of the story costs $110.

The one to the left—a bold new cut just developed this year—is priced at $89.

(Click on this particular photo and look closely and you will be able to see what my wife is getting for Christmas. Tell her and I will miss a look like this on Christmas morning.

Below is a one of at least six display shelves.

Look down to the lower right on the the next to the bottom shelf and you will see one of Strobach’s recent inspirations.

When I first saw it it reminded me of a star burst.

His cuts radiate up the sides of the bowls and are brilliant when placed in a sunny location.

Here are a couple of more shelving units filled with the master cutter’s work.

You can enlarge the photos by clicking on them, but I can assure you there are so much more brilliant than they appear here.

I call the big bowl on the bottom the “wedding bowl” because it is our gift to newly-weds. I have bought enough for my great-nieces and nephews.

I tell Mr. Strobach that after we are long gone, his bowls will still be stunning young people when they open their wedding presents.

The price of the big bowl has decreased from $99 to $89. The reason is that the Polish manufacturer has cut its prices this year.

Here’s a closer look.

I took this picture in the Artesian Shop at the Illinois State Museum in Springfield (my son’s favorite museum in Springfield). Strobach’s work there costs twice what it costs in his home. See my “Top Shelf” story, which has close-up photos of much more of Strobach’s work and Strobach at one of his cutting wheels. Not all of the pieces are still available, but a number are.

Here’s a bowl I like a lot.

(Don’t point my wife to this story. Remember, she thinks I only write about political stuff.)

And what about this stunner at $129. It may be one of Strobach’s one of a kind creations.

Lest you think everything is expensive, take a look at this sugar and creamer. I don’t see a price tag on the creamer, so I think you could buy the two for $34. (Call Strobach to make sure.)

Below you see two vases priced at $169 and $89 with a $199 pitcher between them.

They are beautiful.

Three more pricey ones are below, but when looking at the cost, remember that it would be twice as much if sold retail.

From left to right, they sell for $159, $199 and $195. You cannot imagine how much work goes into cutting them.

Here are two more vases, priced from left to right at $214 and $95.

My wife and I are partial to the design on the right. It is similar to the one on the “wedding” bowl.

I know this is too long an article, but I keep finding photos that show how broad Strobach’s talents are. Look at this one, for instance.

When I saw the rounded cuts on its side, I thought of the copper cigarette tray I made in Boy Scout camp back in the 1950’s.

The cuts on both look as if they were made with a ball pean hammer, but you know it took a lot less skill to wield a hammer than to the make these cuts. The contrast between the round cuts and the straight ones give this bowl a character of its own. This is also a design developed in the last couple of years. It costs $137.

Don’t you wish you could be as creative as this artist when you are in your 80’s?

Strobach has provided his art crystal to two Illinois governors—George Ryan and Rod Blagojevich—but don’t hold that against him.

Ryan’s wife has good taste not only in crystal, but in earring backings. She was wearing some at a gathering Ryan held for Republican state representatives at the Springfield house the state rented for him. I admired them and she told me where she got them. Now they are in my wife’s jewelry box.

Strobach has a lovely note from Lura Lynn Ryan on his bulletin board.

You can also see a faded page from the book of Illinois artists for which she wrote the introduction. It’s the one with his picture on it.

I’ve gone over probably every day of the week, including weekends right before I have a party to attend.

If you are too far from Crystal Lake to drive over, Strobach will ship them to you, if it’s in the $100 range.

Just give him a call at 815-459-7377, if you see something that strikes your fancy.

Tax District Officials Will Say, “Oh, Bleep!” When They Read This

A funny thing happened on the way to the end of the calendar year.

The Consumer Price Index has been decreasing.

It’s still up 1.1% for the last twelve months.

That is probably enough to earn an

“Oh, BLEEP!”

from many tax district officials.

Why?

The “Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U): U.S. city average” is the percentage increase (until now) upon which the property tax cap is based.

This coming year, tax districts are allowed an increase in their “tax take” of 4.1%, plus new construction.

But look what is happening since August. It’s on the table below:

The cost of living was the same in September as it was in August.

From September to October, however, it decreased a seasonally adjusted 1%.

And from October to November, the seasonally adjusted CPI fell 1.7% more.

That’s good news for consumers, but very bad news of tax districts.

Will the CPI fall more than 1.1% from November to December?

Will the schools, non-home rule villages, junior colleges, townships, fire protection districts, park districts, etc., get no increase whatsoever in property taxes collected in 2010?

Will their friends in the General Assembly change the tax cap law?

Will that offer legislative challengers the opportunity to label supporters of gutting the tax cap the title of “tax hiker?”

Stay tuned for the “sturm und angst.” (And, no, I don’t know how to lay in an umlaut above the “u” in “sturm.”)

And the tip for this story? It came from CPA and Nunda Township Supervisor John Heisler.

For those in the Chicago metropolitan area, here is a press release telling what happened locally in the last month.

Snow Blower Time

It’s mid-December and I have shoveled our moderately long driveway what, eight times?

I’m getting tired and winter has hardly begun.

When my wife told me that it was going to snow 7-10 inches today, I finally decided to get out the old snow plow.

I had it repaired when we were were first married 18 years ago.

I haven’t used it since.

It’s been stored so far in the back of the garage my wife didn’t even know we owned a snow blower (or do you spell it “snowblower.”)

I figure snow shoveling is my winter exercise.

So, I called Mike Wonnacott, a friend of my computer guy, Richard Rowland. They both live pretty close to me in southwestern Crystal Lake.

He drove over in his snow-covered pick-up truck and we loaded the Sears Craftsman snow blower.

Now, unfortunately, I have insufficient forethought to have had it tuned up before.

So, I shall be shoveling snow several times more tonight and tomorrow.

If you would like small motor repair, including lawn mowers, Mike Wonnacott’s phone number is 847-477-4917.

He’s an airline mechanic in his real job. He calls the other one

“The Mower Medic”

And my wife got a bonus.

I come from a long line of pack rats. My grandfather Roy Skinner build a poll barn in Crumpton, Maryland, to keep his stuff in after he retired, for instance.

Both my mother and father saved stuff. Lots of it is still down in the basement, along with too much of my “stuff.”

The most disorganized part of my “stuff” is what came when I cleaned out the legislative office in late 2000 and early 2001. It’s still taking up space in the half part of our 2½ garage.

Yesterday I got rid of a whole box (not a big deal to anyone but me).

So, let it snow.

By next week, I’ll be ready for the white stuff.

The lawn mower is back in the corner where the snow blower used to be, so there’s a convenient place to store the machine that will make my arms and back feel less tired.

And, after I finish tonight, I can look forward to a nice hot bath.

Got to finish “The Venetian Betrayal” by Steve Berry.

Message of the Day – A Tee Shirt

In honor of Mark Houser and Pete Heitman’s obtaining their McHenry County dream—zoning permission to build a minor league baseball stadium in McHenry County—I post this tee shirt found in Milwaukee’s Mitchell Airport.

In case you didn’t read the article that kept me up until 3:45 AM, it is here.

It says,

7
DAYS
WITHOUT
BASEBALL
MAKES
ONE
WEAK!

= = = = =
Pete Heitman is the one on the left and his partner Mark Houser of Equity One is on the right.

= = = = =
Vicki Smith informed me the tee shirt was designed by her company, Eagle Sportz of Cartersville, which is located as far from Atlanta, Georgia, as Crystal Lake is from Chicago. I received the owner’s email on April 2, 2009.

McHenry County Supervisor of Assessments Donna Mayberry Thinks “Negative” Multipliers May Be in Offing Next Year

Every year there is a meeting of township assessors led by county supervisors of assessment.

It’s a meeting where new laws are explained, information compiled by county assessment employees is distributed and questions are answered.

As far as twelve township assessors were concerned, the highlight might have been the handing out of forms to apply for an annual $3,000 bonus from the state for meeting certain performance standards.

But taxpayers would have probably focused on Supervisor of Assessments Dpnna Mayberry’s comments on trends in local assessed value.

She pointed out that foreclosures were “still coming in at a record rate—800 more than the year before.”

The county assessment level for 2008 is 33.54%, according to preliminary calculations. A second edit removing all sales that are not arms length transactions might change that figure.

“Just because the market took a dive doesn’t mean people are overassessed,” she continued.

She did say that some areas in new subdivisions may be overassessed.

Since the township multipliers are based on three-year averages, Mayberry thinks,

“we would probably be looking at small negative (multipliers) next year.

Instead of seeing a, say, 1.03% increase from the county level, it might be a .98% figure multiplied times this year’s assessed valuation.

As I have pointed out several times before, the amount that tax districts can collect is limited in total by the increase in the Consumer Price Index, plus assessments of new construction.

Tax rates are below their statutory maximums for all tax districts, I would guess, because property values have gone up so much more than the CPI since the tax cap was imposed by state law.

Whenever assessed valuation increases more than the cost of living, a taxing district’s tax rate is decreased by the county clerk to keep the district from getting more than the increase allowed by the tax cap.

That’s complicated, but it means, even if your assessment a year from now goes down, don’t expect your tax bill to go down.

My guess is that there will be all sorts of homeowners who don’t understand this and they will be “mad as hell.”

I figure the only way for a tax district’s tax bill to go down is if the tax district spends less money.

Anyone think any tax district will do that?

Incumbent Dorr Township Republicans Draw No Primary Challengers

Current Republican office holders in Dorr Township are

  • Supervisor Robert Pierce
  • Assessor Kelli Myers
  • Highway Commissioner Thomas Thurman
  • Clerk Kathleen Schlapp and
  • Trustees Alan Swanson, Harry Lamb, Sr., Mark Anderson, Joseph Evanoff

All filed for reelection in the first every Republican Party primary. Previously there had been caucuses which sometimes turned out to be contentious.

No one filed against any of the incumbents.

The officials may not be home free, however.

The Democratic and Green Parties could file candidates after caucusing in January.

UNICOM-ARC Hits Up Local Taxpayers Again

Last month I looked with dismay at tonight’s proposal to hire St. Louis-based tax hike preparation experts UNICOM-ARC.

These folks come into tax districts like Carpentersville District 300 or Woodstock District 200 and prepare the way for higher taxes.

At Thursday night’s meeting, the McHenry County College Board seems ready to sign them up, albeit for a somewhat lesser amount than was suggested last month.

Take a look at the details (click to enlarge), if you’d bothered with spending taxpayers’ money to soften up the public for a tax hike or bond referendum.

What’s the money officially for?

“McHenry County College has an opportunity to receive community input and feedback through a formalized community engagement program.

“The goals for this effort include providing more detailed information about MCC to the community at large, and collaborating with community members to gather input that will help inform the College as it revises its strategic plan and sets a strategic vision for the future.

“The engagement program will have an initial proposed timeframe of 14 months. Expected components of the engagement program include organizing a community-led facilitating committee, conducting opinion research, hosting information sessions for the community, and leading workshops to gather community input.”

That’s bureaucratize for

“soften up the voters for a tax hike or a bond referendum.”

Here’s my prediction for a 2010 MCC referendum.

And, if it really disturbs you, why don’t you run for the McHenry County College Board.

Goodness knows, it probably has made the most expensive mistake in the past year or so with its baseball stadium proposal.

Pat Quinn’s Vision of Higher Taxes

Pat Quinn has promoted all sorts of referendums, the latest being a series of county and more local

Stick it to the rich

referendums in 2004.

It called for doubling the income tax on those earning over $250,000 a year and using the proceeds to increase State Aid to Education and send an annual check of about $200 to each homeowner.

75% voted in favor. Only about 100,000 of the half million voted in Downstate counties and other local jurisdictions lived outside of Cook County.

Tiny Hardin County (population 4,800) in Southeastern Illinois along the Wabash River voted almost 59% “No.” Hardin is one of Illinois’ poorer counties, but apparently they don’t like it when someone wants to raise their taxes.

82% of Cook County residents (72% in suburban Cook County) made their “income envy” known.

Just thought you’d like to know.

Contest for Assessor in Nunda Township Republican Primary Election

The article I wrote Tuesday about Nunda Township Republican Party filings was based on what had happened as of 4:30 Monday afternoon. I asked Township Clerk to call me if anyone else filed, but, getting no call, make the false assumption that no one else had filed.

It turns out that incumbent Nunda Township Assessor Dennis Jagla is being challenged by the same man who ran against him four years as an independent. His name is Alan Weaver and he is listed as the Alden Township Assessor in the McHenry County Yearbook.

In my first article about Nunda Township, Weaver’s name appeared as a person passing petitions for township assessor.

Message of the Day – A Tee Shirt

In honor of Mark Houser and Pete Heitman’s obtaining their McHenry County dream—zoning permission to build a minor league baseball stadium in McHenry County—I post this tee shirt found in Milwaukee’s Mitchell Airport.

In case you didn’t read the article that kept me up until 3:45 AM, it is here.

It says,

7
DAYS
WITHOUT
BASEBALL
MAKES
ONE
WEAK!

= = = = =
Pete Heitman is the one on the left and his partner Mark Houser of Equity One is on the right.

= = = = =
Vicki Smith informed me the tee shirt was designed by her company, Eagle Sportz of Cartersville, which is located as far from Atlanta, Georgia, as Crystal Lake is from Chicago. I received the owner’s email on April 2, 2009.

McHenry County Supervisor of Assessments Donna Mayberry Thinks “Negative” Multipliers May Be in Offing Next Year

Every year there is a meeting of township assessors led by county supervisors of assessment.

It’s a meeting where new laws are explained, information compiled by county assessment employees is distributed and questions are answered.

As far as twelve township assessors were concerned, the highlight might have been the handing out of forms to apply for an annual $3,000 bonus from the state for meeting certain performance standards.

But taxpayers would have probably focused on Supervisor of Assessments Dpnna Mayberry’s comments on trends in local assessed value.

She pointed out that foreclosures were “still coming in at a record rate—800 more than the year before.”

The county assessment level for 2008 is 33.54%, according to preliminary calculations. A second edit removing all sales that are not arms length transactions might change that figure.

“Just because the market took a dive doesn’t mean people are overassessed,” she continued.

She did say that some areas in new subdivisions may be overassessed.

Since the township multipliers are based on three-year averages, Mayberry thinks,

“we would probably be looking at small negative (multipliers) next year.

Instead of seeing a, say, 1.03% increase from the county level, it might be a .98% figure multiplied times this year’s assessed valuation.

As I have pointed out several times before, the amount that tax districts can collect is limited in total by the increase in the Consumer Price Index, plus assessments of new construction.

Tax rates are below their statutory maximums for all tax districts, I would guess, because property values have gone up so much more than the CPI since the tax cap was imposed by state law.

Whenever assessed valuation increases more than the cost of living, a taxing district’s tax rate is decreased by the county clerk to keep the district from getting more than the increase allowed by the tax cap.

That’s complicated, but it means, even if your assessment a year from now goes down, don’t expect your tax bill to go down.

My guess is that there will be all sorts of homeowners who don’t understand this and they will be “mad as hell.”

I figure the only way for a tax district’s tax bill to go down is if the tax district spends less money.

Anyone think any tax district will do that?

Incumbent Dorr Township Republicans Draw No Primary Challengers

Current Republican office holders in Dorr Township are

  • Supervisor Robert Pierce
  • Assessor Kelli Myers
  • Highway Commissioner Thomas Thurman
  • Clerk Kathleen Schlapp and
  • Trustees Alan Swanson, Harry Lamb, Sr., Mark Anderson, Joseph Evanoff

All filed for reelection in the first every Republican Party primary. Previously there had been caucuses which sometimes turned out to be contentious.

No one filed against any of the incumbents.

The officials may not be home free, however.

The Democratic and Green Parties could file candidates after caucusing in January.

UNICOM-ARC Hits Up Local Taxpayers Again

Last month I looked with dismay at tonight’s proposal to hire St. Louis-based tax hike preparation experts UNICOM-ARC.

These folks come into tax districts like Carpentersville District 300 or Woodstock District 200 and prepare the way for higher taxes.

At Thursday night’s meeting, the McHenry County College Board seems ready to sign them up, albeit for a somewhat lesser amount than was suggested last month.

Take a look at the details (click to enlarge), if you’d bothered with spending taxpayers’ money to soften up the public for a tax hike or bond referendum.

What’s the money officially for?

“McHenry County College has an opportunity to receive community input and feedback through a formalized community engagement program.

“The goals for this effort include providing more detailed information about MCC to the community at large, and collaborating with community members to gather input that will help inform the College as it revises its strategic plan and sets a strategic vision for the future.

“The engagement program will have an initial proposed timeframe of 14 months. Expected components of the engagement program include organizing a community-led facilitating committee, conducting opinion research, hosting information sessions for the community, and leading workshops to gather community input.”

That’s bureaucratize for

“soften up the voters for a tax hike or a bond referendum.”

Here’s my prediction for a 2010 MCC referendum.

And, if it really disturbs you, why don’t you run for the McHenry County College Board.

Goodness knows, it probably has made the most expensive mistake in the past year or so with its baseball stadium proposal.

Pat Quinn’s Vision of Higher Taxes

Pat Quinn has promoted all sorts of referendums, the latest being a series of county and more local

Stick it to the rich

referendums in 2004.

It called for doubling the income tax on those earning over $250,000 a year and using the proceeds to increase State Aid to Education and send an annual check of about $200 to each homeowner.

75% voted in favor. Only about 100,000 of the half million voted in Downstate counties and other local jurisdictions lived outside of Cook County.

Tiny Hardin County (population 4,800) in Southeastern Illinois along the Wabash River voted almost 59% “No.” Hardin is one of Illinois’ poorer counties, but apparently they don’t like it when someone wants to raise their taxes.

82% of Cook County residents (72% in suburban Cook County) made their “income envy” known.

Just thought you’d like to know.

Contest for Assessor in Nunda Township Republican Primary Election

The article I wrote Tuesday about Nunda Township Republican Party filings was based on what had happened as of 4:30 Monday afternoon. I asked Township Clerk to call me if anyone else filed, but, getting no call, make the false assumption that no one else had filed.

It turns out that incumbent Nunda Township Assessor Dennis Jagla is being challenged by the same man who ran against him four years as an independent. His name is Alan Weaver and he is listed as the Alden Township Assessor in the McHenry County Yearbook.

In my first article about Nunda Township, Weaver’s name appeared as a person passing petitions for township assessor.

Woodstock Council Approves Baseball Stadium, Gravel Mining 6-1

With only councilman Richard Ahrens voting in opposition, the Woodstock City Council approved a special use permit for gravel mining across Route 14 from Centegra Hospital down to Lily Pond Road.

A privately financed minor league baseball stadium promoted by Mark Houser and Peter Heitman will be built northeast of Lake Shore Drive and Route 14.

The third of the threesome who showed up at a secret meeting of the McHenry County College Board in March of 2007, Frontier League Commissioner Bill Lee, only to duck out the back door of the board room, was also present for Woodstock’s public meeting.

The stated plan is to have baseball games starting in May of 2010, but when the council was discussing how the 38 acres to be occupied by the stadium would be conveyed to the city ownership if a stadium were not completed within five years of approval of the rezoning, Houser asked for an extra five months.

If a stadium is not completed by May of 2014, the city would get the parcel.

So, two years if all goes well and five if there are hitches.

In the meantime, Merryman Aggregates will be mining gravel, stockpiling enough each year to provide what the firm thinks it can sell.

Tom Zanck, attorney for the proposal, and others kept calling the operation by other names, e.g., “aggregate extraction.”

Members of the newly renamed McHenry County Defenders, now, the Environmental Defenders of McHenry County complained of the fast track for the re-zoning. The report from the McHenry County Soil and Water Conservation District had just arrived Monday and had not been reviewed by city staff.

Those wishing to slow down the approval process pointed out that it should have been ready before the Planning Commission had reviewed the petitioners’ plan.

Right before the vote, starting at 12:42 AM, Mayor Brian Sager read the report’s executive summary.

In his summation, Sager reported that 41 citizens had contacted him prior to the council meeting had been “strongly in favor.” One was distinctly opposed and two others wanted to make sure certain questions were answered.

Ahrens opposition centered on the far eastern parcel in the proposal.

It fronts on Lily Pond Road, which is where the gravel trucks would leave the property.

Ahrens thought the highest and best use would be something other than the county fair and exhibitions.

Several members had made lists of pros and cons. The pros obviously were considered more persuasive for the six voting in favor of the re-zoning. (Except for the mayor, they are listed in alphabetical order. Picture are in seating order, from left to right with the exception of Ahrens.)

Mayor Brian Sager
Councilwoman Julie Dillon
Councilwoman Maureen Larson
Councilman RB Thompson
Councilman Mike Turner and
Councilman Ralph Webster

But they didn’t agree with the proposal without placing upwards of 50 conditions, a couple of which were strongly disputed by the petitioners.


One was the citing of a state law which said that the city could impose a ticket tax.

When Houser objected, city attorney Richard Flood pointed out that they could take it out, but this council could not bind future council in such a matter. And, since it was in the state law anyway putting it in the document did not harm to the petitioner.

Houser finally agreed.

More contentious was a city proposal which would allow levying an extraction tax. Merryman wanted his surety bond used first, if something were not done which he had promised. It turns out the city wanted to hold his business responsible for any infrastructure failures of the baseball promoters as well, which the council must have thought unfair, because they limited the liability to the mining operation.

Several times, Mayor Sager said that he didn’t want to end up with the problems that Woodstock’s neighbor to the east, aka, Crystal Lake, had with Vulcan Lakes.

Merryman did not propose a pit going beneath the water table and he proposed reclaiming the land as he moved from one part of the property to the next.

Ahrens, Thompson and Turner are running unopposed for re-election.

= = = = =
On top you can see Equity One’s Mark Houser explaining his and partner Peter Heitman’s baseball stadium proposal. Below is Frontier League Commissioner Bill Lee on the right and Heitman on the left. A shot of some of those attending the meeting follows. Mayor Brian Sager is seen directly below with dissenting Councilman Richard Ahrens below him to the left. The council members voting from the proposal are from left to right on the top row, RB Thompson, Maureen Larson and Mike Turner. On the next row you seen Ralph Webster on the left and Julie Dillon on the right. Mark Houser talks to his attorney Tom Zanck directly below. Woodstock City Attorney Richard Flood is below right. At the bottom is another picture of the audience, this time from the back of the room. All photos may be enlarged by clicking on them.