This advantage makes it easier to keep the village's property taxes low.
She wants building owners to let the public know their properties are under renovation.
A downtown restaurant closed three years ago. The village is now in litigation with the building's owner.
The "phenomenal" infusion of money is the result of local congressmen's efforts, the village president said.
The only “highly recommended” candidate for appellate court pursues justice in and out of the courtroom.
The Lyons Township assessor blasted Cook County, saying high-value households benefit from the system.
In her final days, the director gave no signs in her emails to the library board that anything was awry.
The village said it's spending money on designing projects for both north and south of 47th Street.
La Grange is expected to cooperate with Western Springs in resurfacing the street.
Anderson ranked “highly recommended” by Illinois Bar Association — the only one of seven appellate court candidates to receive this ranking.
The library celebrated the director's first six months. She left days later.
The owner wants parking accommodations for people coming into town for special events.
A businessman asked about the pothole, which is near an intersection.
The program is available for those suffering from addictions and mental health issues.
The village leader said officials are "champing at the bit" to make announcements on flood projects.
The quarry operators contend they get few calls about blasting, a village trustee said.
It no longer must submit a housing plan because it crossed the state threshold.
A resident who requested the school zone had politicians walk with his children to school.
Lyons Township High's ex-student body leader called himself a "Trump cultist."
Local police officers were on hand during both demonstrations, the village president said.
A new cocktail bar in Western Springs could not legally exist in La Grange, a trustee said.
New Executive Director and Executive Administrator Named at the Lyons Township Mental Health Commission
The park board is considering improvements to eight local parks.
He targets Jewish people and those who "worship false gods." He calls for killing them "when we take power."
A pastor said new village leadership changed the approach to the church's permit. She called reporting on the issue "highly misleading."
The library is nearing 20 years old, so money is needed for building improvements in the coming years, the official said.
Village trustees decided against taxing to the maximum, a move two colleagues criticized.
A new chief is expected to take office next week. He is another department's deputy chief.
A school failed to get a permit to operate in the church. Village officials are set to decide on the issue Monday.
The village would lose out going forward if it fails to raise taxes to the maximum, two trustees said.
The hospital chain requested the village approve signs reflecting the latest merger.
The village acknowledged an engineer's report showed a problem with the work. The contractor said, "It's on us."
A village official said an engineering study is expected to be completed by year's end.
It is the result of changing commuter habits, with Metra ridership way down.
The biggest decrease in employees was in the police department. The fire and public works departments also saw reductions.
The local fire department is now allowing some people outside the village's boundaries to join.
Most of the survey's data is being kept secret by the school. Even the survey questions are under wraps.
The park district detailed its improvement plan for a local park.
The village is joining forces with other area public entities to share information technology services.
A restaurant and a salon must move because of the theater project.