The village president detailed the steps taken to prepare for such events.
The assistant manager is leaving after nearly four decades with the village.
The village has been in a dispute with a company over the placement of antennas.
The village has long sent animals to the Hinsdale Humane Society. Now the village wants to look at other shelters for a comparison.
The previously embattled manager is apparently in much better shape with the Village Board.
The village kept an email secret, citing a federal order. Yet an official spoke about it during a meeting.
The village president hasn't responded to questions about his statement against a sober living group.
A developer is asking to convert vacant land into code-compliant lots.
Group home director is "in this for the money," the village president said.
The added costs are attributed to railroad flaggers and construction oversight, an official said.
An organizer said she was disappointed in the low participation, but "we'll forge ahead."
All three candidates said they were running individually. Two have their own committees now.
All three candidates back the ouster of the district's superintendent.
Police responded to a complaint from a Hinsdale Central High School junior.
The village names a new clerk, while a longtime official plans to leave next month.
He said he and his classmates found no parking signs on the street. Village officials responded.
The group home alleged the village violated the Fair Housing Act.
A trustee's "no" vote this week broke a 2½-year streak of unanimous decisions.
The village leader, who rarely speaks publicly about costly housing litigation, hails a recent court victory.
The village is considering landmark status for a home built in 1959.
The village debated putting up a gate for a new neighborhood of $2 million-plus homes.
Some officials say a gated neighborhood is inconsistent with the village's development.
A resident involved in historic preservation is running for trustee.
Three of the five are known critics of the district's administration.
A majority hostile to the superintendent could take office next year.
At least three of the four candidates who have filed so far are critics of the administration.
The board president said his decision involved his day job as a financial adviser.
Two are known critics of the school board. They are running in the April election.
Dunkin' Donuts won't be built on tavern site, which is the target of code enforcement.
The longtime village clerk is retiring. An official says she has one of the village's most "unenviable" duties.
Her GOP opponent is a former state senator and now a township supervisor.
The two candidates have raised more than $600,000 in their race for District 45, which includes much of Hinsdale.
The village has seen a loss of income as a result of the closure.
Others are on the radar to be done in later years, an official said.
The district said its decision to require teacher's aides to go to work was age-blind.
The judge rules the village can keep its lawyer's communications secret.
The messages sent to Village Hall had the feel of an organized campaign.
Pro-life group criticizes GOP DuPage County Board chairman candidate.
Village commissions are praised for working to preserve historic downtown.
Officials approved a plan in a tree dispute, but neighbors were unhappy with it.