Officers are set to receive more floating holiday time. This makes Hinsdale more competitive in attracting officers, the village said.
Officials express concerns about the shopping center's appearance.
Dog owners want more off-leash hours during the day at a local park, the village said.
The village says federal law requires it to keep local documents under wraps.
The village's leader cast the deciding vote against it after pushback from residents.
The village is eyeing a special taxing district for road improvements.
Opponents are rallying neighbors against the developer's proposal. The village's meeting room is expected to be packed.
The village bought license plate readers, but records don't indicate where the village installed them.
But the village wouldn't get sales tax money from the company, which is what it wanted.
A former finance director becomes the treasurer for now.
An official said blaming the local project for a train crash is "pure conjecture."
A developer's engineer says a traffic signal is needed, but Village Hall is silent.
One zoning board member says she found the development would be uncomfortable for neighbors.
Homeowners association fears the business would have a big impact on neighbors.
An office building owner has yet to plant landscaping, which would screen it from nearby houses. It's still in the plans, the owner said.
The tough times appear to have passed for the manager.
The manager, who was suspended earlier this year, is in line for both a raise and a bonus.
In a split vote, the zoning board approves a controversial drive-thru for Dunkin' Donuts.
The village seems "dead set" on approving a proposed Dunkin' Donuts restaurant, attorney says.
County Board member from Elmhurst raised less in the last quarter. They are vying to succeed the longtime chairman.
Dunkin' Donuts drive-thru wouldn't create unsafe traffic conditions, village says.
The company planned a retiree development, but neighbors objected, citing density and traffic.
An elected village trustee answers questions about his residency.
A trustee questions whether the village's practice with vehicles is correct.
A resident says the expert's statement indicates a bias for a drive-thru.
Elmhurst released an EEOC complaint filed against it. Hinsdale did not.
Fire chief was previously prohibited from speaking with the media on the ladder truck issue.
Village can provide no documentation of a "potential security breach" that it said it suffered.
Grievances against the village manager are "uniquely difficult" to handle, the village says.
Officials say they want more turnover in parking, so customers get spots.
At first, schedules contain many open shifts, but nearly all end up being taken, the fire chief says.
The village is considering a new way to handle parking.
Developer says a light would avoid "massive" traffic delays. The village has taken no position.
The debate resulted in residents' objections and yard signs for a ladder truck.
The village said its manager was working from home. But records show his network access was cut.
Village has no documents showing an official was on personal leave. This calls into question the village's original story.
Officials suggest buying a new ladder truck. One of the considerations is the publicity over the long debate.
The village had yet to approve a demolition permit for the house in question.
Work began on a property before the village had issued a demolition permit, officials said.
The historic commission denied a demolition request, but the owner can get a permit anyway.