State Rep. Jeff Keicher | Facebook
State Rep. Jeff Keicher | Facebook
In a Jan. 6 news release, Rep. Jeff Keicher (R-Sycamore) lauds passage of House Bill 4228.
“Too often Illinois taxpayers have been beaten up by the number of local units of government that are able to levy residential property taxes," Keicher said. "What my original bill and this new bill does is to make sure that we right-size local government units at the property tax level so that every ten years we put it in the hands of the taxpayers to decide whether or not they want to be taxed for that function of government. This is the best piece of good government legislation we will see come out of Springfield this year. In some places lighting districts or other special assessments are helping minimize property taxation to a smaller area where it’s needed. Who are we to decide what all Illinois local government should look like – leave it to the taxpayer.”
House Bill 4228 was filed with the clerk on Nov. 23, 2021, and passed both Houses on Jan. 5, 2023. It forces local taxing bodies to review and report on their efficiency every ten years. Those taxing bodies must look at whether consolidating operations would bring greater accountability and financial savings to the taxpayers.
The governmental units must form the aforementioned committee by June 10, 2023, and at least once every 10 years after June 10, 2023, thereafter, according to the text of the bill. The committee would include the elected or appointed members of the governing board of the governmental unit, and any chief executive officer or another officer of the governmental unit. Each committee must meet at minimum three times.
Keicher's original bill, which this built off of, was House Bill 4691. He filed that bill on Feb. 6, 2020, and was renumbered through 2022 as it moved through the House and Senate.