Community Corner
Des Plaines Public Library: 2022 Budget Includes New Chiller, First Increase In Eleven Years
Des Plaines Public Library trustees have approved a 2022 budget including a $300,000 expenditure to replace a 21-year-old chiller system ...
DPPL
08.20.21
Find out what's happening in Des Plainesfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Des Plaines Public Library trustees have approved a 2022 budget including a $300,000 expenditure to replace a 21-year-old chiller system and increasing the property tax levy to $6.4 million, from $6.1 million in 2021.
Find out what's happening in Des Plainesfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The current chiller system is beyond its expected lifecycle and is in urgent need of replacement.
It regularly breaks down, stops cooling, and creates potentially hazardous conditions in the building for residents and staff.
The 2022 levy request increases the amount the average Des Plaines household pays by approximately $13.
The library’s portion of a resident’s tax bill remains significantly less than that of other taxing bodies.
This is the first time since 2011 the library has increased the levy, except for a small 1% adjustment in 2018.
Over the past eleven years Des Plaines Public Library has reduced the taxpayer levy from a high of $6.5 million in 2011 to $6.1 million, a levy amount it has held steady since 2014.
During that time, the library has drawn upon reserves to meet the challenge of increased expenditures, including rising insurance costs, minimum wage requirements and standard building maintenance and replacement costs associated with an aging building.
DPPL Board President Dr. Gregory Sarlo says:
DPPL Board Treasurer and Finance Committee Chair Kristen Graack adds:
Future capital projects in 2023 and beyond include replacement of the heating/boiler system, upgrades to the building access system, replacement of servers and switches, and replacement of the security camera system.
In the course of drafting the 2022 budget library staff eliminated all non-critical spending to minimize the impact purchasing a new chiller will have on taxpayers.
Library Director Jo Bonell says:
This press release was produced by the Des Plaines Public Library. The views expressed here are the author’s own.