The party has yet to give any money in the battle for the District 82 House seat, according to election board records.
He joined other mayors in endorsing the state representative, who was appointed last December.
Officials expect to save $60,000 a year with the move.
"If they want to put a gate, it's got to be privatized," a village trustee said.
Like Darien, Burr Ridge's part of the bill barely registers.
The proposed industrial complex may be more intensive than originally thought.
Donations from Capri Ristorante employees were questioned in a resident's complaint to a federal agency.
A neighborhood wants a gate to prevent rush hour traffic from coming through.
The work is postponed to spring. The village explains why.
Republicans denied being behind a survey that was believed to be Islamophobic. But the party did not condemn it either.
Seven industrial buildings are proposed. Townhomes are no longer in the plan.
The survey is said to suggest a state representative candidate belongs to Islamic terrorist groups.
Here's a guide for Burr Ridge voters before they hit the polls.
A former village trustee paid the mayor a settlement amount to end 5-year-old litigation, the men said.
Increased density and water runoff are among residents' concerns about the owners' request.
A trustee said families want fences to keep their children safe.
A company with a local address had not been paying sales taxes for some time, a village official said.
This helps make the case about the need for a new Village Hall, the mayor said. The project would cost millions.
The village is poised to hire an engineering firm to find a way to fix the problem.
Village trustees rejected two residents' requests for fences. Officials said they were following longtime practices.
An accounting mistake means an unexpected upgrade in the village's balance sheet, officials said.
A resident argues for a neighbor's request for a gate and fence. Village trustees turned it down.
The current chief is retiring after 15 years at the department's helm.
The district kept the minutes of the meeting secret for a time, even though it released the recording.
He joined the department 34 years ago, taking the helm in 2009.
The family wanted to protect their small children. Village officials had qualms with the proposal.
The official apologized for his "insensitive language" regarding his Polish heritage.
The village should look into the law for those riding motorized scooters, the mayor said.
The mayor said he was pondering a rule on where such trucks should be parked.
The low bid beat the engineer's estimate by $77,000, the village said.
A couple said a gate and fence would be for their children's safety. Their neighbors have gates.
Emails show the village's handling of a reporter's call about the deputy chief's arrest.
The firm was enlisted as the Chicago Tribune was preparing to write a story about the deputy police chief's arrest.
A special account is expected to have up to $2 million next year, according to the village.
The village has prevailed in all but one complaint over the last five years, he said.
The village employee is known for his "perpetual politeness" and "assuring presence."
It was seen as a good government measure years ago. That was after another town's official made off with $50 million.
The homeowner continued a construction project, despite a stop work order, according to public records.
The violations involve a trustee who did not show up in person for nearly seven months.
The mayor wants no truck terminal in town. One is just outside the village limits.