Chicago Sun-Times

Cheer efforts to remake government

- MADELEINE DOUBEK

You’re feeling the Illinois government­s’ squeeze, right? State lawmakers took more, raising the income tax. The school district and city are taking more. Cook County is taking more if you buy sugary drinks. Metra is getting ready to take more.

The government­s are everywhere. They’re always taking more. Feels like no one ever is giving you more. Where does it end, right?

Well, the success stories about ending government­s and their excesses don’t get enough attention. Here are three attempts at tackling township excess:

One thing local government boards like to do is take as much of your money as they can and keep it. State Rep. Brad Halbrook, a Shelbyvill­e Republican, sponsored a law that says, in effect, township trustees can’t hoard tax dollars. Township funds, other than the capital fund, cannot exceed 2.5 times the average spent from them during the previous three years.

Some local watchdogs dug around and found some Shelbyvill­e Township funds had “20, 30, 60 times or more in reserve than they were spending,” Halbrook told me.

Government­s just don’t need to be holding that much of our money. Halbrook expects that a rebate is coming in Shelbyvill­e Township, but how does this law get enforced elsewhere?

“The enforcemen­t is going to be from trustees or supervisor­s who will do the right thing,” he said. “I think what you’re going to see is citizen engagement and I think you’re going to see people starting to look at what’s happening in their townships. This is going to have a big impact on property taxes right now.”

Suburban school districts are ripe for this kind of law. The Daily Herald reported earlier this year that two- thirds of 93 districts studied had far more in reserve than the 25 percent the state recommends.

In Sangamon County, which encompasse­s Springfiel­d and several other central Illinois communitie­s, the township collector jobs are going away.

State Rep. Tim Butler, a Springfiel­d Republican, told me Sangamon’s Citizens Efficiency Commission recommende­d the job go because it duplicates what the county treasurer already does. In Sangamon, 16 of the 26 townships continue to elect collectors. In a little more than four years, they’ll all be gone because the law Butler sponsored discontinu­es the office at that point.

Most Illinois counties eliminated collectors long ago. They went by the wayside in Cook County in 2012. Will, Madison and Peoria counties are the others that still have them, Butler said.

“I do think that’s a good model because it gives people the lead time to make the adjustment and figure out how they transfer the work,” Butler said.

It might be a model for future use in other government­s. Butler’s district includes Lincoln, a community with 14,000 people and four school districts. “I don’t think you’re doing the students the best service” to have all different curricula going into high school. “I just think that’s something we have to talk about with 800- plus school districts, but that’s always a difficult conversati­on to have,” Butler said.

Seven years ago, then- Avon Township Supervisor Sam Yingling, now a Democratic state representa­tive, looked at the township’s highway commission­er. The job was handling 11 miles of road because the rest of it was within municipal boundaries, but it had a $ 2 million levy. Then, state law said a township had to have four miles of road or less for a township board to be able to abolish it. Now, in counties outside of Cook, trustees can vote to put a question on the ballot abolishing a road district and, Yingling says, Vernon Township is holding hearings and preparing to do just that.

Outside of the Chicago metro area, Yingling noted, road districts “are the lifeblood in moving agricultur­al goods to and from the market,” so the law provides for local control. What works in one part of a state as diverse as Illinois might not work in another.

Ironically, Avon Township still has a road district. “I know, I know,” Yingling said. I’m working on it. . . . It’s amazing to me how long these things take.”

They do take long. And we citizens have to demand the efficienci­es are sped up and that we are given more power to spark change ourselves.

Next month, Transform Illinois, a coalition of groups promoting this kind of smart government streamlini­ng, will host its third annual conference and awards ceremony in Oak Brook. Full disclosure: The Better Government Associatio­n is a member of that group.

Yes, it seems our government­s lately are always taking more. But there are efforts to take some government­s, remake them and make sure they’re being efficient with our money. Let’s cheer these efforts and make sure they keep coming. We deserve it.

We citizens have to demand the efficienci­es are sped up and that we are given more power to spark change ourselves.

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