The group is prohibiting animals from the village until a new contract is signed, an official said.
It'll be a place for people to read and relax, a village trustee said.
A Hinsdale resident who has short-term rentals says the measure would end his business model.
The village is poised to sell its old firehouse to a developer. Six row homes are planned.
It's unclear how the proceeds will be spent to support Hinsdale's districts.
The village is considering a special tax district to revive the area.
Renters and neighbors disagree over the length of the short-term rental ban.
The village bought the land earlier this year after developers' previous plans fell through.
A proposed policy would mandate departing members to delete records that the district deems confidential.
The village included the dentist's office in a message to developers for a possible project.
The leader says schools are hiding African-American attacks on white children. She gives no data.
Residents contend the village did nothing after a series of crashes dating back to 2007.
The new development is expected to improve drainage problems in the neighborhood, an official said.
Schools are downplaying African American students attacking whites, a Downers Grove Township trustee says.
The developer likes to undersell and overdeliver, a representative said.
The village president engages with constituents during meetings. That doesn't happen in many places.
The village and a woman disagreed over whether the damage was minor. The crash was connected to Fuller's Car Wash.
The car wash where a boy died last year balked at the cost of barriers, the village president said.
An old school building would include fewer condos but more parking spots per unit.
Nothing in the village's code prohibits short-term rentals of less than 30 days. But an official says they are banned.
Last year, a worker fatally hit a 14-year-old boy with a car. Fewer crashes have occurred there than other places in town, an official said.
Such high-wattage bikes can go 50 mph and are essentially motorcycles, a police official said.
An official said an old church site could be a park in an area that needs one.
The village's leader questioned whether the bridge was needed. Replacing it would cost millions, officials said.
Village officials have "no idea" of the sacrifices deputy chiefs have made, the former fire chief said.
Downtown public buildings may deter commercial development, an official said.
A village panel struck a compromise on short-term rentals in March. The matter next goes to the Village Board.
An official raised the possibility, saying few residents use it. He said the village should find out what residents think.
His fire department position was eliminated while he was serving temporarily in the top job.
The village paid for crash-tested barriers to protect pedestrians, the village president said.
The engineer advised the village look at revoking the wash's permit, citing a history of crashes.
Residents have sharp differences on a ban. A second vote on such an issue is standard procedure for the Plan Commission.
The fire department is expected to see another change in leadership.
This street represents the "highest ideals of prestige and privilege," according to a survey.
The company has submitted nine applications to the village.
The village warned the car wash 27 years ago that it would issue tickets for parking on sidewalks.
Her family alleged she was the victim of discrimination in the fire department.
Neighbors expressed concerns, saying the village's plan to buy the site surprised them.
A developer may submit a plan for the property, an official said.
The board eliminated the deputy chief's post, although a key official said the move would be "ill-advised."