Daily Southtown

A ‘New era’ for Cook County Forest Preserves

$189M budget in place to improve numerous areas

- By A.D. Quig

Flush with money received after voters authorized a fresh property tax hike, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e pitched next year’s Forest Preserves budget Tuesday as the start of “a new era.”

“For the first time in a long time, it is not the budget of an agency in a holding pattern, keeping long-term, pressing needs at bay,” Preckwinkl­e said Tuesday.

“For fiscal year 2024, we are moving forward, and there is only more on the horizon for the residents and visitors of Cook County.”

Three years ago Preckwinkl­e pitched a pandemic austerity budget that tapped into the forest preserves’ rainy-day fund. Then-Commission­er Larry Suffredin highlighte­d the district’s “precarious” financial state and warned officials may have to sell off land owned by the forest preserve district to stay afloat.

In the summer of 2021 Preckwinkl­e and the district board — whose members are the same as the Cook County Board — paved the way for county voters to say “yes” or “no” to a property tax hike that would raise money to help maintain the 70,000 acres of green lands, trails and water.

Last November, after a concerted campaign by preserves boosters, voters overwhelmi­ngly authorized a 0.025% increase in the preserves’ property tax levy, raising an additional $40 million that officials said they would be spent on maintenanc­e at facilities such as the Chicago Botanic Garden and Brookfield Zoo, land restoratio­n and pension payments.

The 2024 budget is the second year with extra funding in place. This year’s budget was amended after voters approved the referendum. On Tuesday Preckwinkl­e proposed an $188.7 million budget for the district in 2024, an increase of 34% from this year’s pre-referendum proposal. Her proposal also brings the total head count up to 721 from 633 two years ago, according to budget documents. New hires will include a “restoratio­n hydrologis­t, ecology field supervisor, heavy equipment technician (and) employee recruitmen­t manager.”

Voters’ approval of the referendum ”has made all the difference” already, she continued, allowing the county to start new ecological restoratio­n work at Sauk Trail and Jurgensen Woods.

More restoratio­n efforts will come in 2024 at Orland Grassland, Deer Grove, Country Lane Woods and other preserves, she said. The preserves also used referendum funds to upgrade equipment such as pickup trucks, wood chippers and mowers; expand its day camp offerings; and start repairs on paved and unpaved trails. “We have begun similar multiyear repair initiative­s for more than 30 picnic shelters and major restroom renovation­s at as many as 60 buildings,” Preckwinkl­e said Tuesday.

Over the last year the preserves bought nearly 300 acres, according to budget documents. This year’s budget sets aside more than $10 million in the county’s real estate fund, and the preserves are “prepared if and when larger properties reach the market” to pounce on a sale, Preckwinkl­e said.

2024’s budget calls for restoring 400 acres of woodlands and flood plain habitat near the Tinley and Thorn Creek watersheds; expanding plant propagatio­n, seeding production and native seed collection efforts; and boosting wages for the county’s Conservati­on Corps participan­ts.

 ?? ANTONIO PEREZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? People walk along a leaf-covered path at Swallow Cliff Woods, a Cook County forest preserve located in Palos Hills, in 2022.
ANTONIO PEREZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE People walk along a leaf-covered path at Swallow Cliff Woods, a Cook County forest preserve located in Palos Hills, in 2022.

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