Measure threatens to dissolve Illinois’ rural townships, sparking opposition – Washington Examiner
The article discusses the introduction of Senate Bill 2217 in Illinois, proposed by State Senator Suzy Glowiak Hilton. This bill aims to dissolve rural townships with populations under 5,000, a move that has sparked significant opposition among local residents and officials. Critics, including Phoenix Township Clerk Jan Weber and State Senator Chapin Rose, argue that the dissolution would be detrimental to rural communities, as township governments are essential for local services like road maintenance and emergency responses.
Weber notes that nearly 10,000 units of local government exist in Illinois, making it the state with the most local taxing bodies in the country. Opponents of the bill contend that consolidating services into larger government entities could lead to increased property taxes and a loss of effective local governance,as counties lack the resources to manage the additional responsibilities. Rather of mandatory consolidation, some legislators, like State Senator Chris Balkema, propose alternative measures to facilitate voluntary consolidations among local entities to avoid these adverse outcomes.
Measure threatens to dissolve Illinois’ rural townships, sparking opposition
(The Center Square) – Opponents say Senate Bill 2217 will be detrimental to rural Illinoisans by dissolving townships that have population sizes less than 5,000.
Illinois state Sen. Suzy Glowiak Hilton, D-Western Springs, has introduced Senate Bill 2217 to dissolve townships that have population sizes less than 5,000.
Jan Weber, Phoenix Township clerk in Henry County, said she knows there’s probably some duplication of services among some of the various state agencies.
“We probably have the most state agencies, boards and commissions of any other state in the country,” said Weber.
According to an Illinois Auditor General report, it was found that over 100 state boards in Illinois were inactive.
“Our county doesn’t have this situation, but we have neighboring counties where there may be six or seven elementary districts. Each one of those elementary districts is their own unit of government, and then you have a high school district. In our county, all of the schools are what we call unit schools. So they maintain a high school, a middle school and an elementary school,” said Weber.
Illinois has more than 850 school districts.
With nearly 10,000 units of local government, Illinois has more taxing bodies than any other state. Weber said residents rely on the township government to take care of roads and dissolving would mean adding a lot more employees to larger government entities.
“I know that the county highway department in our county, in most counties, those county employees are paid better than what we pay in the townships. They probably have health insurance. They have retirement benefits and things that townships in many cases do not offer. So it would be a huge budget drain financially out on the county,” said Weber.
Townships were originally created to provide local government services to rural and unincorporated areas. Weber said about half their residents are rural and the other half live in subdivisions.
“They depend on the township government to take care of the roads. That’s fixing potholes. That’s removing trees that fall into the roadway, plowing snow, so they can leave their homes on a daily basis to go to work or get their kids to school,” said Weber. “So having good roads and access to those roads, virtually 365 days a year, 24 hours a day, is vital just for people’s livelihood.”
State Sen. Chapin Rose, R-Mahomet, called the bill a “war on downstate Illinois.” Rose also explained consolidation would lead to property tax increases.
“For the county to simply be tossed with no equipment, no manpower, here’s the debt, take the debt, how are they supposed to handle this without raising property taxes? It is simply going to be a property tax increase on the citizens of these counties,” Rose said during a recent news conference.
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State Sen. Chris Balkema, R-Channahon, has a similar bill, Senate Bill 1347, but it wouldn’t mandate units of government to consolidate rather it “removes the red tape” so, for example, fire districts A and B can decide to consolidate on their own.
Rose supports Balkema’s bill.
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