A homeowner continued a construction project without a permit, even after the village told him to stop, according to records.
The trustee once criticized a colleague for absenteeism. He shows up even less.
The mayor noted the village condemned Hamas in the document.
The mayor expressed unhappiness with a family who he said gave wrong information.
The villages want backup water supplies. Burr Ridge needs a water main through a Hinsdale park.
The mayor, who has expressed unhappiness with County Line Square, said he is seeing progress in correcting problems.
Until Monday, Trustee Joe Snyder last showed up in person to a board meeting before Halloween.
The order was made during the mayor's battles with a village trustee.
The parties agreed to throw out the lawsuit a month after it was filed.
The family, who did not seek a permit, asked for relief. The mayor's compromise won the day.
Besides Burr Ridge, the water comes in from towns such as Darien.
The village gives more opportunities than other public bodies to speak during meetings.
That's because of the possible elimination of the grocery tax, which the mayor called regressive.
He has not followed the village's code for remotely attending meetings, public records indicate.
He found out about the nondisclosure agreement with a Fortune 500 firm through a Patch story.
The village's policy requires trustees to say why they are connected remotely. One hasn't.
He learned about the nondisclosure agreement when Patch wrote about it.
The agreement may explain why an official denied knowledge of a Costco coming to town while he was arranging for just that.
A trustee requested equal enforcement for restaurants that have violated outdoor dining agreements.
He said the issue has moved to the top of his list. Burr Ridge shares its code with Willowbrook.
The mayor said the Gaza situation is village business because humanitarian causes matter.
The district signed a pact with a company that is looking to sell its property to a developer.
The park district's director said he signed the agreement. The park board did not vote on it.
The resolution calls "loudly" for an end to hostilities and the return of U.S. and Israeli hostages.
The park district released a closed session recording. The attorney general said the meeting broke state law.
The "luxury" development would be on the old TCF Bank property, a marketing flyer says. The developer has not turned in an application yet.
He denounced a trustee in 2021 for absences. His attendance rate is even worse.
It would mean a new public works building for the village.
Truck traffic from the project concerned some residents at a Village Board meeting.
Those from a variety of faiths called for officials to back a ceasefire resolution.
He said the family owners fail to meet the village's standards at the center.
The mayor challenged people to find another debt-free suburb. Patch took him up on it.
A resident found the village undercounted the legal costs related to a former trustee's records requests.
Anderson focuses on diversity, individual rights, and equal protections.
This advantage makes it easier to keep the village's property taxes low.
The mayor argued that non-home-rule towns get the short end of the stick. He said all towns should have flexibility with hotel tax income.
They belong to a committee that is gathering public feedback on what to do with the old CNH property.
The developer says its project would benefit neighbors and increase property tax income.
A trustee wants the information online to let the public know who is costing the village money.
He said it is disrupting restaurants and that he would be "all over" the owner to finish the work.