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In
DuPage County, questions in pursuit of your money
23
referendums, most seeking to boost revenue, will be
on February ballot
Jack Komperda, Daily Herald Staff Writer
Posted December 8, 2007
Dozens of DuPage County municipalities will
have a question or two to ask voters come next February.
Twenty-three referendum questions from 19 different governments
will appear on the February primary ballot.
Most of the measures will ask homeowners to open their
wallets wider.
The requests come from all parts of the county, including
school and park districts, municipalities and DuPage County,
which will ask voters to approve a quarter-cent sales tax
increase.
The money would generate more than $40 million annually
to fund public safety and stave off massive layoffs.
DuPage
County Board members already passed a so-called "doomsday
budget" that would cut about 200 jobs, eliminate programs
in areas such as public health and close the DuPage County
Historical Museum. Implementation of those cuts, though,
will be delayed until after the results of the Feb. 5 primary
referendum.
"People live in the suburbs for two reasons: safe
streets and good schools," DuPage County State's Attorney
Joseph Birkett said. "The bottom line is by paying
attention to the little problems, we have kept crime very
low compared to other large counties. That doesn't happen
if we have to disband, for instance, our gang unit or our
mental health programs."
"If this referendum doesn't pass," Birkett added, "it's
going to be tough to perform our duties and obligations."
In several communities, the county's sales tax question
will compete for attention with some big-ticket requests
from area school districts.
In Wheaton Warrenville Unit District 200, for instance,
voters will be asked for $58 million to build a new Hubble
Middle School.
Naperville Unit District 203 will ask voters for a $43
million tax increase to pay for a variety of facility improvements,
mainly to aging Naperville Central High School.
And Glen Ellyn Elementary District 89 wants homeowners
to approve a $24.8 million borrowing plan to pay for technology
and building improvements.
Besides the schools, both the Lombard and Addison park
districts will ask their respective communities for money
to build new aquatic centers.
The Addison Park District referendum, if approved, would
allow the agency to borrow $14 million.
In Lombard, park district officials want to borrow $5.9
million to build a replacement for Moran Water Park, a
50-year-old facility permanently shuttered after Labor
Day.
O'Hare International Airport expansion will be the focus
of three advisory questions in Bensenville and Addison
Township.
The two highly politicized advisory questions in Bensenville
will ask voters if two local school districts should accept
cash payments from Chicago for the property tax liability
incurred from losing about 500 homes the city is planning
to bulldoze to make room for new runways.
And in Winfield, residents will see two familiar ballot
questions in April. Both Winfield Township and the Winfield
Fire Protection District will again be placing referendums
voters shot down last April.
Winfield Township will ask voters for a 2-cent tax-rate
increase to pay for paving and maintenance projects for
48 miles of township roads. Six previous requests failed
to win voter approval for the township.
The Winfield Fire Protection District, meanwhile, will
again ask voters for permission to lift the tax cap for
each of the next four years to allow for 12.5 percent tax
increases to pay for three new full-time firefighters.
It is the agency's third consecutive request.
"If we don't get this request passed, we're going
to be in the hole with our budget," said Winfield
Fire District Chief Phil DiMenza, who noted that it's been
nearly 20 years since the fire district successfully sought
a tax increase.
The repeat requests, however, aren't sitting well with
several residents, who have submitted their own referendum
request asking voters living within the fire district's
borders whether they'd approve a measure to have trustees
on the fire district board elected by the public.
Currently, the Winfield Fire Protection District board
of trustees are appointed by DuPage County.
"These trustees don't represent our interests," said
Dorothy Hanlock, who helped spearhead the movement to collect
1,644 signatures to place the referendum on the February
ballot.
"We
voted this referendum down several times, yet here they
are again asking the question. We're tired of
it."
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