Leyden High School District 212 Has Embarked on “the beginning of a historic construction project” Paid for By the Leyden Taxpayers


On May 18th, a ground breaking was held for the construction and renovation project at West Leyden, with additional construction and renovation projects planned for East Leyden.


You can follow the construction projects at :

East Leyden :      http://leyden212.org/Page/3979

West Leyden:    http://leyden212.org/Page/3996

The press release termed this ground breaking as “the beginning of a historic construction project”, with a earth shaking price tag.

The “historic construction project” will cost anywhere between $85,000,000 and $125,000,000 depending on which newspaper article that you read,

At East Leyden, plans call for new classrooms, practice rooms for band and choir, a new cafeteria/commons, an enclosed inner courtyard, a preschool and day care facility, new wrestling room, new labs, new girl’s locker room, and a new aquatic center.

At West Leyden, an addition is to be built inside a portion of the inner courtyard.  The first floor  will be a cafeteria/commons addition and a kitchen renovation.  The second floor addition will include a new library and media center.   There will also be renovated classrooms and office spaces, among other projects.

This “historic construction project” with a mega price tag was undertaken without consulting the Leyden Township taxpayers.    In a reasonable and normal process for a project in excess of $100,000,000 the taxpayers would be consulted by an elected body in the form of a referendum that would authorize the sale of bonds and undertaking of the debt after a public debate and vote by the taxpayers.

But instead the Board of Education foreclosed any opportunity for the voters to have a say in this massive undertaking by utilizing some obscure laws which not only bypass the taxpayers but thwart their objection to such a massive amount of borrowing.

Financially, the District is facing an increasing percent of students classified as low income’which further focuses on the plight of the financial struggles of the families who reside in Leyden Township.  These families are being forced to confront this additional tax burden.  

In 2014/2015, over 53% of the District’s students qualified for free or reduced lunch.  The District is seeing an increased percent of students classified as “low income”, while the District continues to increase the tax burden on their parents.   

At the same time increasing taxes have chased business and industry from Leyden Township

This blog will discuss in future postings the maneuvering that occurred to obligate the taxpayers to such a massive amount of debt without their approval.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in #leydenpride, East Leyden, Economic Development, Economy, Education, Elections, Finance, Franklin Park, gangs, Illinois, Illinois Pensions, Leyden, Norridge, Northlake, political satire, politics, Roy F. McCampbell, Social Media, Special Education, Uncategorized, West Leyden | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Leyden and Norwood Park Townships Need To Seriously Consider School District Consolidation 



One of the maddening aspects of the state’s ongoing financial crisis is that some obvious long-term solutions are rarely considered.

One solution to the massive tax collections by state and local government is to reduce the number of local governments. That includes school districts that have been slow to consolidate in ways that would save money and allow more money to flow into classrooms.
According to a recent research report by the Illinois Policy Institute, the state’s 859 school districts are ripe for consolidation. About 25 percent of them serve just one school. One-third of Illinois school districts serve fewer than 600 students.
Although the districts are small, that doesn’t mean there isn’t a layer of bureaucracy. Not only does every district have a superintendent, but many have assistant superintendents, transportation supervisors, human resource and business staffs and other positions that could be eliminated with more school consolidations.
When compared with other states that serve more than one million students, it’s clear the Illinois system is inefficient. Florida, which has taken school district consolidation to the extreme, has an average of more than 40,000 students per district. California and Texas have about 6,000 and 4,000 students per district, respectively. Illinois has 2,339 students per school district, on average.
The savings of district consolidation could be significant, in both administrative costs and future pension costs. The institute study looked closely at districts in the New Trier Township. This wealthy Chicago suburb is home to six elementary school districts that feed into a single high school district. Taxpayers pay for seven superintendents; the average salary of those seven is $280,000 per year. Taxpayers could save millions a year on superintendent salaries alone.

The savings would not be confined to just one district, however. Because taxpayers across the state pay into the educators’ pension system, reducing the number of administrators in this one district would save taxpayers $30 million over the next 30 years, said the study.
The institute estimates if the state cut the number of districts in half, putting the average district size still less than California, there would be district operating savings of between $130 million and $170 million annually. The costs in pensions would be between $3 billion and $4 billion over the next 30 years.
In other words, this is something that would save the state, and taxpayers, real money. There are obstacles to consolidation, including a concern about the loss of identity. However, in this case, consolidation is not a rural issue. In fact, some of the greatest targets for consolidation are in heavily-populated areas.
There is little doubt that consolidating school districts is politically difficult. But so is raising taxes and explaining to schools why they don’t receive the resources they expect from the state.
To escape from its current financial doldrums, Illinois government needs to fundamentally change and the size of government needs to be smaller. School district consolidation is one place where change is necessary.

Local Mayors and Village Presidents, along with School District Board Presidents and Township Supervisors in Leyden and Norwood Park Townships need to provide the leadership to begin a conversation about consolidation.      

As the over levying, and the excessive funds accumulations by some Districts and other Districts operating in serious deficit conditions continue to spiral out of control, the municipal officials are facing serious impediments to economic development and redevelopment, further increasing the tax burdens upon its taxpayers.    

Leyden SD212 has successfully over levied to the point where they have accumulated massive sums of surplus funds and now realize over $7,000,000 more in annual tax revenue than expenditures.    Now coupled with their accumulated surplus they are selling debt certificates to finance a capital building program which is approaching $125,000,000.    This entire expenditure of a publicly funded project has been pursued by the SD 212 Board of Education with no public input nor a voter referendum.    SD 212 has exploited holes in Illinois law to circumvent the taxpayers and voters of the District.    

Schiller Park School District 81 has pursued a similar course of actions on the Kennedy School project.   

In both circumstances, the Boards of Education have denied the taxpayers a voice while committing them to millions of dollars of principal and interest repayments over the next decades.  All of this debt retirement is designed around escalating and excessive levies;  while the taxpayers are told they face no additional costs.    As these elected bodies engage in a “smoke and mirrors” strategy.

At the same time, the school districts of Norwood Park Township (while raising school fees to epic proportions) are operating with deficits and eroding what reserves they may have, hoping when the financial crisis reaches epic proportions in each district the voter will cave and approve rate increases.    

The paradigm of protectionism of turf by school districts needs to end so that the best educational interests of the students are preserved while guarding the reasonable interests of the taxpayers and making the business environment affordable. 

Property  taxes are outpacing residents’ ability to pay them.   Over the past 50 years, whether measured in comparison to household income, economic growth, population or inflation, all classes of property taxes – residential, commercial, industrial, etc. – have placed an increasingly unaffordable burden on Illinoisans. Since 1963, Illinois property taxes have grown 2.5 times faster than inflation and 14 times faster than the state’s population.
And looking at residential property taxes alone since 1990 shows:
• Residential property taxes in Illinois have grown 3.3 times faster than median household incomes.

• Illinoisans’ residential property-tax burden – as a percentage of median household income – has risen 76 percent.

• If Illinois froze its residential property taxes today, it would take 28 years for residents’ property-tax burden to return to 1990 levels.

The myoptic conduct of the boards of education are strangling the taxpayers;   this  thirst by the multiplicity of boards to squeeze excessive amounts of revenue for their fiefdoms is making it unaffordable for property owners and renters to continue to reside in our communities.     

Our elected leadership has to act and act now before the economies of our communities are destroyed.    

Posted in Chicago, East Leyden, Economic Development, Economy, Education, Elections, Employing Disabled, Finance, Food, Franklin Park, Harwood Heights, Illinois, Illinois Pensions, Leyden, Mayor Caiafa, News, Norridge, Norridge School D80, Northlake, Pennoyer School District 79, politics, Roy F. McCampbell, Schiller Park, Schiller Park Commentaries, Schiller Park School District 81, Social Media, Special Education, Taxation, Union Ridge SD86, West Leyden | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Today is the Day !!!


 
The minimum wage increase in Cook County starts today, July 1st
It’s going up to $10 an hour and will increase by a dollar every year to get to $13 an hour by 2020.

There are at least 50 cities, towns and villages that have said no to the pay raise and sick leave requirements, so they’re opting out of the deal passed by Cook County officials. Schiller Park has opted out.  
In Chicago, the minimum wage went up to $11 and hour, rising to $13 by 2019.

Posted in Chicago, Economic Development, Economy, Employing Disabled, Finance, Illinois, Mayor Caiafa, minimum wage, politics, Taxation, Union | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

It’s Time To Streamline Illinois Government


Last year legislators from both sides of the aisle came together to approve a “smart streamlining” bill (Senate Bill 3) that would enable all 102 Illinois counties to begin merging or eliminating overlapping, and arguably, unnecessary units of government, including many of our 1,400 antiquated townships.
Illinois has 7,000 units of government, more than any other state in the nation. In fact, there are more governing bodies in Illinois than in New York and Florida combined, even though both states far outpace Illinois’ population. Partly due to all those governments, Illinois has the second-highest property taxes nationwide.
SB 3 gives local governments the flexibility they need to make the most out of limited resources by, when appropriate, consolidating or dissolving districts and townships into more efficient governing bodies.
The Better Government Association supports SB3, along with other non-partisan organizations and advocacy groups across the state, including Transform Illinois, of which the BGA is a member.
SB 3 gives Illinois an opportunity to become a national leader in government efficiency.

Posted in Chicago, Crime, East Leyden, Economic Development, Education, Elections, Employing Disabled, foia, Franklin Park, Harwood Heights, Illinois, Kemper Sports, Norridge, Norridge School D80, Northlake, Pennoyer School District 79, political satire, politics, Roy F. McCampbell, Social Media, Special Education, Taxation, Uncategorized, Union Ridge SD86, West Leyden | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Is Leyden High School SD 212 Achieving Its Transparency Goal ?


leyden reflections

In a democracy it is especially important that citizens have access to information so they can actively participate in government and make good choices on Election Day;  at Leyden School District 212, transparency is the best way to promote #leydenpride

As Thomas Jefferson said, “An informed citizenry is the only true repository of the public will.””

Elected officials should stop making excuses on why they can’’t be more transparent.

Leyden SD 212 regularly affirms their commitment to transparency in their governance.

But are their actions implementing their statement supporting “transparency” ?

An intense review of Leyden SD 212 website calls their commitment for “transparency” into question.  when you cannot even find the “Board of Education policies” on their website.

The policies are basic to school district governance and the only way that you can get a copy of the Leyden High School SD 212 Board Policies is to file a Freedom of Information (FOIA)  request with the school district.

So as a taxpayer of Leyden SD 212, and for many as a parent or student of Leyden SD212 to review the governance documents of the District you have to file a FOIA .

Yet numerous adjacent grammar and high school districts have their policies on line.

So why,  as the District that continuously articulates its desire to provide transparency in its governance, SD212  does not publish its governing documents on their own website ?

I had to file a FOIA to get a copy of the governance boards policies.

I am posting a link to a copy of Leyden High School District 212 Policies.

Please go to this link to review Leyden High School District 212 policies:

Board_Policy_Book_10_11_16

I hope that my Blog article will encourage SD 212 to pursue their stated goal of transparency more aggressively to provide access to the governing policies of Leyden High Schools for the students, parents and taxpayers of the District.

Until the SD 212 decides to portray their words of transparency in action by posting their governing Board policies you can refer to my blog page to review the policies.

I will have more to say about transparency at Leyden School District 212 in the future;  I am hoping to provoke a conversation as to how the Leyden Board of Education should implement their commitment to “transparency”  .

True “transparency” at Leyden School District 212 will promote #leyden pride.

Let’s all encourage the Leyden High School Board Of Education SD 212 to post their Board policies !    

#leydenpride  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in #leydenpride, East Leyden, Economy, Education, Elections, Finance, foia, Franklin Park, Illinois, Illinois Pensions, Leyden, News, Northlake, political satire, politics, Roy F. McCampbell, Special Education, Taxation, West Leyden | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Schiller Park Board of Trustee’s Recognize Police Officer Steve Lima for His Community Service 



See the presentation below:


At the June 1, 2017, Village of Schiller Park Board of Trustee’s meeting the Board adopted a resolution recognizing retiring Officer Lima’s community service.   The resolution was read by his son, Trustee Lima.

Posted in Economy, Mayor Caiafa, politics, Roy F. McCampbell, Schiller Park, Schiller Park Commentaries, schiller park police, Social Media, Uncategorized | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Appearance Speaks Volumes For Schiller Park


 The Village needs to understand and implement “curb appeal” throughout the Village, especially at it’s gateways. 

Would a respectable resident repair his auto on their front lawn and then leave the parts laying around for a week on the front lawn ?

We as a community need to change our thinking if we wish to pursue successful economic development with the”big dogs”.   

No matter what the excuse, 4111 Mannheim Road looks bad, and leaves a poor impression of Schiller Park to visitors and travelers alike.

Some landscaped green space bordering Mannheim Road would go a long way in improving the depressing look.

Most entry points to our Village produce a terrible appearance to the visitor and are depressing to our residents .  

Lawrence and River Road is  a prime example.  



This area provides an awful image for everyone going to and from Rosemont and as well as entering our Village. 

This abandonment has existed for over seven years.  These conditions clearly contribute to issues arising at the motel next door.  This transmits a message no one cares and you can do what you want in Schiller Park.  

Why not demolish this obsolete building and install lush landscaping until the property is redeveloped ?

Another key Village entry point is Irving Park and River Road with an abandoned gas station for over 4 years.    


Again at this point the building should be demolished and the Village might acquire the property as green space, which is much needed in this over built area with apartments.   It would enhance the entry to the Village and provide “curb appeal ” for residents and visitors alike.  

This is not about “politics”, but how we as a community envision the Schiller Park of the 21st Century and beyond.  

We can’t point fingers at each other but need to “roll up our sleeves ” and work together as a “family”.

Let’s get it done as a Village !

It “takes a Village” !

Posted in Chicago, Crime, Economic Development, Economy, Elections, gambling, gangs, gun control, Illinois, Leyden, politics, Schiller Park, Schiller Park Commentaries, Social Media, Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Schiller Park Village Board is Considering The Exempting of Private Employers from Cook County Minimum Wage Ordinance 



At the June 1, regular meeting, the Schiller Park Board of Trustees will vote on an ordinance that would effectively exempt private employers in the village from ordinances passed last October by the Cook County Board of Commissioners that would increase the minimum wage and establish earned sick leave for employees.

I raised this issue in February, 2017, in my article at      https://royfmc.com/2017/02/09/should-leyden-and-norwood-park-township-villages-opt-out-of-cook-county-minimum-wage-ordinance/ , when I encouraged the Village Board of Schiller Park to opt out of the Cook County ordinance.
Under the county’s minimum wage law, private employers would be required to pay employees $10 an hour starting July 1, 2017. The current minimum wage in Illinois is $8.25 an hour.
The minimum wage in Cook County would then increase by $1 each year through 2020. On July 1, 2021 and each July afterwards, the minimum wage will increase by the rate of inflation up to 2.5 percent. If unemployment is over 8.5 percent, however, there will be no increase.
As I noted in my earlier article that the county’s minimum wage ordinance creates an “uneven playing field for employers and employees inside and outside of Cook County.”
Many home rule municipalities have opted-out of the county’s minimum wage law, creating an uneven patchwork of wage levels across the county. In addition, the wage law also creates an uneven playing field between counties.
The  communities that are opting out want the state to address this in order to create an even playing field. 
When a community opts out, it creates an uneven playing field not only for employers but for employees.  You  can have people in neighboring communities working the same job and getting different wages. That’s in Cook County. If you’re next to, say, DuPage County, you can have a scenario with three different sets of rules.
Cook County took a step forward and raised the bar and I applaud them for that, but they’ve created now a patchwork of communities opting out, which those communities have a constitutional right to do.
So far at least 13 other villages in Cook County have opted out, including Bellwood (which opted out in March), River Forest, Rosemont, Rolling Meadows, Palatine, and Elmwood Park.  The county’s minimum wage law doesn’t apply to public employers like municipalities. 
Currently, Springfield is working on a proposed minimum wage law, called HB 198, which would raise the minimum wage for both private and public employers across the state from its current level to $9 on January 1, 2018. The minimum wage would then increase to $10, $11.25, $13 and $15 each subsequent year until 2022.

If House Bill 198 is enacted, it would provide a uniform minimum wage applicable to all Illinois employers and employees, as opposed to the Cook County Ordinance, which only applies to private employers within Cook County, and not public employers, like the Village. 

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West Leyden Groundbreaking 


On May 18th, the Leyden Board of Education SD212 held a ground breaking for a $25,000,000 building project at West Leyden High School.  At West Leyden they are building an addition inside a portion of the inner courtyard.  The first floor will be a cafeteria/common area addition and a kitchen renovation.   The second floor addition will be a new  Library and media center.  Renovated spaces will include new classrooms,reorganized offices, student support areas and more. 

Posted in East Leyden, Education, Employing Disabled, Finance, News, Northlake, O'Hare Noise, politics, Special Education, Uncategorized, West Leyden | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Remember When You Could “Fly the Friendly Skies of United “


 

 

 

 

 

 

Without the shocking video, it unlikely that the world would have learned or cared about the violent manhandling of a 69 year old man on a plane last month.

The outrage on social media, the mea culpa by an airline CEO, the promise to treat customers better…………NONE of it would have HAPPENED.

The passengers who shot those videos on a United Express plane in Chicago violated United’s policy on photography.  By the letter of the airline’s law, they too could have been ordered off the plane.

Under United’s policy, customers can take pictures or videos with small cameras or cellphones “provided that the purpose is capturing personal  events. ”  Filming or photographing other customers or airline employees without their consent is prohibited.  America, Delta and Southwest have similar policies.

Passengers are accustomed to using their cellphones to take photos and videos that they can upload to Facebook, Twitter or Instagram.  Airline rules on photography are sporadically enforced, but passengers should read them in the in-flight magazines because there can be consequences.  This month, a United ticket agent ordered a passenger’s reservation canceled as he filmed her while disputing a $300 baggage fee in the New Orleans airport.  After Navang Oza posted his video online, United apologized, saying that the video “does not reflect the positive customer experience we strive to offer”.

In April, a  Jet Blue Airways crew called airport police to meet a man who they said continued to record a selfie video during a security-sensitive time in flight, while the cockpit door was opened.  Michael Nissenshohn insists that he wasn’t recording the procedure.

“I told them there is no rule against taking a selfie on a plane,” Nissensohn says.  He says he was ordered off the plane and held up at LaGuardia airport in New York for more than an hour before being let go without charges.  JetBlue declined to comment  on the incident.  A spokesman says the airline doesn’t publish its photography policy for security reasons.

With airline customer service in decline, videotaping is the only way that passengers can make sure they are treated fairly, say Gary Leff, a travel blogger who has criticized the airlines over the issue.

Gary Leff noted that “the TSA allows more photography at the checkpoint than the airlines allow on board their planes.”

The Transportation Security Administration says that photography at checkpoints is fine if people don’t take images of monitors or interfere with screeners.  Travel bloggers say, however, that people have had run-ins with TSA officers, and you should expect  to be questioned if you snap more than a casual photo of a companion.

Lawyers who specialize in First Amendment or travel law say airlines generally cannot limit photography or recording in an airport because it is a public space.  But airlines have more power on planes because as private parties they are not bound by the First Amendment.

Joseph Larsen, a media law attorney noted that “they are within their rights to establish these rules, they are within their rights to throw you off the aircraft if you continue filming.”

However, there is no law against taking photos or video on a plane, and it is unlikely that anyone would face legal jeopardy for taking pictures of an altercation on a plane or their own peaceful selfie.

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