Bolingbrook Battles Emerald Ash Borer

By: Geoff Ziezulewicz
Source: Chicago Tribune

Bolingbrook has been thrust into the region’s battle against the emerald ash borer, a tiny beetle that arrived stateside about a decade ago and has been laying wasted to ash trees ever since.

Last week, Bolingbrook’s trustees approved a plan to spend nearly $66,000 to replace 142 affected trees.

“This is the first of many, unfortunately,” Mayor Roger Claar said at the meeting.

All of Bolingbrook’s approximately 36,000 ash trees are at risk, he said.

“If you see a tree on the parkway with leaves gone, it’s probably an (ash tree),” he said. “There’s no way of knowing where that (insect) is going to go.”

Town officials are still assessing which of the approximately 12,000 public ash trees will need to be removed, Claar said.

Those trees that are removed will be replaced with a variety of species.

Ash trees on private property may be removed by the town if they pose a safety risk, Claar said.

The $66,000 for tree replacement will be granted to Siebert Landscaping, a Chicago-area company.

The mayor warned the cost of removal could be “astronomical” in the coming years, possibly millions of dollars, and that’s just to remove the public property trees.
Read the rest of the story here.

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Batavia Council to Keep Committee System

By: Linda Girardi
Source: Sun Times


Aldermen have decided to stick with the four primary committees of city government and meet as a joint committee every Tuesday of the month.

Batavia Mayor Jeff Schielke originally suggested the City Council convene as a committee-of-the-whole and meet on the alternating Mondays of City Council meetings, as is done in neighboring cities.
Read the rest of the story here.

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Glen Ellyn Mayor Won’t Sign Off on Budget

By Christopher Placek
Source: Daily Herald 

In his final days as village president of Glen Ellyn, Mark Pfefferman says he won’t be signing on to the village’s $48.1 million budget because he believes the village should have “higher standards.”

The 2013-14 spending plan begins May 1, and was approved Monday on a 4-1 vote of the village board. Trustee Pete Ladesic was the lone vote in opposition; Pfefferman was absent at the time of the vote, though the village president only votes in the case of a tie.

On Tuesday, he sent an email to village board members, Village Manager Mark Franz and Village Finance Director Kevin Wachtel to say he would not be signing the budget ordinance. It may be only a symbolic gesture as state law requires the ordinance be adopted by the board before the start of the new fiscal year on May 1.

“The continuous progress we have made in improving budgets for the last three years has reversed direction,” Pfefferman said in the email. “Errors, from levy amount to footnotes, were common. Our balanced budget and reserve policies, so clear last fall, have become too complicated for me to explain to interested customers without support materials

 

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Alderman Favors Raising Smoking Age to 21

By: Fran Spielman
Source: Chicago Sun Times

Chicago should consider banning cigarette sales to smokers under 21 to slow an epidemic of teen smoking, an influential alderman said Monday.

Hours after New York City Council Speaker and mayoral candidate Christine Quinn proposed raising her city’s legal smoking age from 18 to 21, Health Committee Chairman George Cardenas (12th) talked about Chicago following the Big Apple’s lead.

“That’s something worth exploring because more kids are smoking now,” said Cardenas, who didn’t immediately provide data to back that up.

In 2009, nearly 1 in 5 high school students — or 20 percent — smoked cigarettes. Teen smoking has dropped every year since the 1990s, but progress was slowing by 2009, according to the latest data available from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Cardenas has proposed that young people under 21 be prohibited from purchasing energy drinks in Chicago.

 

For more about the alderman’s opinion and the  mayor’s response click here.

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Lemont Mayor Touts Economic Development During ‘State of the Village’

By:  Amanda Luevano
Source: Lemont Patch

Economic development and recent marketing initiatives were among the highlights of Lemont Mayor Brian Reaves’ 10th annual “State of the Village” address Wednesday.

The luncheon was held at Crystal Grand Banquets, 12416 Archer Ave., and was sponsored by the Lemont Area Chamber of Commerce. The event was attended by several village employees and trustees, as well as dozens of school, township, library, park district, police and fire officials.

Also in attendance were Romeoville Mayor John Noak and Bolingbrook Mayor Roger Claar, and representatives from local businesses.

Read more of what Mayor Reaves had to say here.

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BTTP – “Chicago Problems”

Rod focuses on Chicago in this episode.  His topics include Jesse Jackson Jr and Chicago newspapers, where he believes objective reporting is gone.

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Lombard Village President Dies from Complications of West Nile Virus

By: Marie Wilson
Source: Daily Herald

Longtime Lombard Village President William J. “Bill” Mueller always had his hometown in his heart, on his mind, in his words, and even on his license plate, which simply reads “LOMBARD.”

Mueller, who had been battling the cancer multiple myeloma, died Saturday from complications of West Nile virus. He was 76.

“His license plate says it all. Bill was all about Lombard,” said Yvonne Invergo, executive director of the Lombard Area Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

He also was “an amazing dad, husband and grandpa,” his daughters, Donna Fruehe and Debbie Rapata said in a statement Saturday. “Our father was truly a servant-leader and everything he did was for others.”

Mueller, who was elected village president in 1993, is being remembered as an optimistic leader whose passion for serving the people of Lombard was evident in his every action.

Read more about his life here.

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Former Bear Wants to Run for Romeoville Mayor

By: Brian Stanley
Source: Chicago Sun-Times

Former Chicago Bears defensive tackle Steve McMichael says he plans to run for mayor of Romeoville.

The member of the 1985 championship team and college football Hall of Famer has co-owned Mongo McMichaels Sports Bar on Illinois 53 for nearly two years and moved into the village in April.

McMichael said he got the idea to run for office while thinking about the schools his 4-year-old daughter will attend and speaking with residents at his business about their concerns.

Read more about the Super Bowl Champion’s desire to shuffle into office here.

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Alderman Against Rahm’s Plan For Area Around Wrigley

Chicago Sun-Times

By Fran Spielman

Ald. Tom Tunney (44th) on Monday declared his opposition to key elements of Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s plan to help the Cubs wring $150 million more in advertising and sponsorship revenues out of Wrigley Field and surrounding streets to minimize any taxpayer contribution toward renovating the 98-year-old stadium.

Tunney said he’s dead-set against any additional signage that blocks the view of the rooftop clubs overlooking Wrigley that share 17 percent of their revenues with the team.

“The rooftops and the owners of Wrigley have a unique partnership. They want to be protected long-term. They have a lot invested. The city has asked them to spend millions to keep their buildings safe. We’ve got to find ways they can both stay in business,” said Tunney, whose ward includes Wrigley.

“One of the tenets of the landmark ordinance is the view into the residential area. The more signs you put in there, the more you block the view into the neighborhood. We’ll find some appropriate places. But, what I want is long-term peace between small business owners and the big business at Clark and Addison.”

Tunney said he is equally opposed to the Cubs’ plan to close Sheffield and Waveland every game day to make way for money-making street fairs that duplicate the festival atmosphere around Boston’s Fenway Park.

“Street closings have been a real quality-of-life issue for residents. To think they would like to close them every game is problematic. It interferes with the quality of life of a residential community. How would you like your street to be shut down 80 days a year. Yes, you knew you bought near the park. But, the streets belong to the people,” Tunney said.

“It’s in the best interest of the residents and the quality of life of LakeView to keep these streets open. If there’s commercial activity, it belongs on the Clark Street corridor.”

Tunney then referred to the Cubs’ revised plan to build a long-stalled triangle building adjacent to Wrigley promised, but never delivered to residents in exchange for a bleacher expansion.

“They’ve come up with a plan that’s more of an open-air plaza. That is probably the most appropriate place for them to do their Yawkey Way: on their own property,” he said.

The Chicago Sun-Times reported last month that Emanuel is privately pushing a Fenway-style plan to relax Wrigley’s landmark status and allow the Cubs to wring as much as $150 million in advertising and sponsorship revenues out of the stadium.

The changes range from more outfield signage behind the Wrigley bleachers, possibly including a jumbotron in right field to street closings on Sheffield and Waveland every game day to make way for money-making street fairs.

Click here for the full report from the Chicago Sun-Times.

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Emanuel To State Lawmakers On Pension Costs: ‘Day Of Reckoning Has Arrived’

Chicago Tribune

By Ray Long

Mayor Rahm Emanuel took his case for reining in soaring pension costs to state lawmakers today, saying change is needed or Chicago’s “quality of life will suffer.”

Emanuel called for a pause on cost-of-living increases for 10 years to allow pension systems “to catch its breath.” He wants city employees to increase their contributions 1 percent each year for five years and to allow employees to be offered a choice of retirement plans.

“The day of reckoning has arrived,” Emanuel said, saying taxpayers, retirees and employees want politicians to be honest and “level with them” about the problems.

A rare step for a Chicago mayor, Emanuel personally pitched his ideas for cutting costs to a House pension panel. It’s an approach that his immediate predecessor, Richard M. Daley, had not taken, though he made a variety of appearances over the years.

Emanuel said the cost-of-living pause is necessary because retirees are getting increases while current employees are unable to get similar increases. For example, a retiree making a $60,000 pension in 1995 is now receiving $100,000. After 10 years of a pause, Emanuel said the plan would go to a simplified cost-of-living adjustment rather than annual compounded increases.

In addition, the mayor said the idea of increasing employee contributions helps rectify a system that hasn’t changed along with the longer life expectancies over the years. He also talked about a choice, or alternative, plan, potentially some type of proposal that would not undermine a defined contribution plan. Already, for example, many city employees have a 401(k) type of plan, Emanuel said. But officials said discussions are ongoing as to what shape choice should take.

Click here for the full report from the Chicago Tribune.

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