Annual Town Meeting April 2009March 2009Effective July 28, 2008, Public Act 95-761 amended Article 30, Annual Township Meetings, and provided new direction with regard to the notice and agenda provisions relating to annual and special township meetings.
Can oil and water mix—Impact fees and non-home rule municipalities?By John H. BrechinJune 2009The recent April 15, 2009 decision of the 2nd District Appellate Court in Raintree Homes Inc. v. the Village of Long Grove illustrates the peril when non-home rule units attempt to “stretch” the limits of explicit statutory authority.
Case note: Federal court upholds municipal housing code enforcement proceduresBy Paul N. KellerDecember 2009Most municipalities are concerned about building and zoning code violations in existing buildings, and take steps to prevent and eliminate illegal and unsafe conditions. Mandatory inspection programs are becoming increasingly common, but their legality has been open to question.
Does the Illinois Open Meetings Act violate the First Amendment?By Peter Friedman & Stewart WeissDecember 2009A federal appellate court has recently held that the enforcement of one of the cornerstone provisions of the Illinois Open Meetings Act (“Illinois OMA”)—that a majority of the quorum is the trigger for a meeting under the Act—is subject to a legal standard that may make it very difficult for this and similar provisions in other states to withstand constitutional scrutiny.
Equal protection—Class of oneBy John H. BrechinDecember 2009The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals recently announced its decision in Hanes v. Zurick on August 18, 2009.
The evolution of business districtsBy Kathleen Field OrrJune 2009Local governments bear so much of the burden of the economic decline, its powers to participate in the efforts to restore economic viability should be strengthened.
Good news for adult use zoning restrictionsBy Peter FriedmanMarch 2009The 7th Circuit significantly advanced an already growing line of judicial authority and common sense that rejects the notion that each and every government zoning authority must provide space within its borders for adult uses.
Impact fees and non-home rule municipalities: Oil and water can mixBy Richard G. Flood & Ruth A. SchlossbergJune 2009Despite the publicity it has received and the concerns it has generated, Raintree Homes, Inc. v. the Village of Long Grove is not new law. Impact fee ordinances which are properly drafted and which employ reasonable assumptions are enforceable.
In briefBy John H. BrechinDecember 2009On July 24, 2009, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals issued its decision in the case of Casna v. City of Loves Park.
Municipal financing strategiesBy Kurt P. FroehlichAugust 2009An outline of the commonly encountered mechanisms for issuing multi-year debt obligations to finance municipal projects and certain short term money needs.
Supreme Court broadens law enforcement investigatory powersBy Michael D. BersaniMarch 2009In an historical decision rendered on January 26, 2009, the United States Supreme Court in Arizona v. Johnson, unanimously upheld the authority of the police to “stop and frisk” a passenger detained pursuant to a valid traffic stop, when the officer reasonably suspects that the person is armed and dangerous but does not suspect criminal activity.
Transparency and the Open Meetings ActBy Maryann BullionApril 2009Despite the fact that the Supreme Court recognized the need for transparent government in 1860, this policy was not codified as the Open Meetings Act until 1957, and the Freedom of Information Act was not enacted by the legislature until 1984.