Documents reveal the details of what the children-focused Waterlemon wants from the village government.
The group, which lost a key grant after sexual harassment allegations, says its critics pursue a "questionable agenda."
The village wants to store water underneath a Lyons Township High athletic field.
The group lost a major grant after its leader was accused of sexual harassment.
Two-thirds of local water customers have lead lines, which the federal government requires to be replaced.
The village backed off from a contractor that it recommended late last month.
Some trustees indicate they're against giving the sole authority to the village manager.
The village president acknowledged underground storage is a possibility.
The village's liquor panel plans to take up a request from a business geared toward small children.
The man had been offered assistance multiple times, an official said.
The money is coming from the federal government, an area agency says.
The high pay shows 'poor fiscal management,' a government agency says.
He acted inappropriately at a holiday party, a government agency alleges. His group's future is now in jeopardy.
The board's next step is voting to put the issue on the November ballot.
Trustees unanimously backed the plan to cut greenhouse gas emissions.
The village president clarified the town had no plans to add parking on the West End.
Trustees noted the need for more affordable housing in town. Neighbors opposed the project.
The plan calls for big cuts to greenhouse gas emissions.
Neighbors oppose the project, which the village's Plan Commission approved.
A project may help with drainage in north La Grange neighborhoods, officials say.
The county overcharged the resident because it assessed the wrong house, the local assessor said.
The resident's tax bill tripled because she was assessed as having three houses, not one, an official says.
Drivers are going "superfast" down the street, so children and others would benefit from signs, a resident said.
The district detailed improvements it would like to see, including pickleball courts, a disc golf course, a dog park and a bandshell.
The village manager wants to buy squad cars without the Village Board's involvement.
The lot will cost a lot more, but it's better for flood control, a trustee said.
Village officials were asked about the water that they were planning to send from west to east.
The post became vacant after the unexplained departure of the last director.
A new development is not expected to include any apartments for lower-income people.
The building will improve the village's west end, which has seen little development, the developer's lawyer said.
The village is working with the high school to put a water vault under a sports field, officials said.
Two La Grange trustees questioned why La Grange would pay more for upgrades than McCook and Brookfield.
La Grange and La Grange Park are teaming up for an administrative hearing system that can try certain local cases.
The developer plans to raze three buildings to build a new one, according to village records.
The village is poised to pay for streetscape improvements, with the state taking care of the rest.
Many residents are seeing their assessed values double, a Board of Review official said.
Other states mandate public interviews to fill board seats, but Illinois has no such law.
Apartments and businesses will be in the building, the developer said.
The village has sued the owner, seeking fines of up to $500 a day.
Anderson focuses on diversity, individual rights, and equal protections.