Home

General Information

About Us


CVC Audit Information Download


Contact Us


Display Advertising


Ad Sizes and Samples


Classified Advertising

Communities

Communities Served


Community Resources

-$- Online Store -$-

Digital Online Subscription


Order A Classified Ad Online


Place Assumed Name Notice


Cook County Legals Printed Here


Kane County Name Change - $85


Place Obituary Notice


Download Sample Paper

Submission of News

Engagement Submittal


Birth Announcements


News & Photos


Sports Scores

Lifestyle Features and Videos

Food and Lifestyle


Lifestyle Videos


Seasonal Widget


Crossword and Sudoku Puzzles


Mug Shot Mania News

Online News and Commentary

The Examiner U-46 News Feed


Cheap Seats 2024 By Rich Trzupek


Cheap Seats 2023 By Rich Trzupek


Cheap Seats 2022 By Rich Trzupek


Guest Seat By Harold Pease, Ph.D.


Cheap Seats 2021 By Rich Trzupek


Cheap Seats 2020


Cheap Seats 2019


Cheap Seats 2018


Cheap Seats 2017


Cheap Seats 2016


Cheap Seats 2015 B


Cheap Seats 2015


Cheap Seats 2014


Cheap Seats 2013


Cheap Seats 2012


Cheap Seats 2011


Cheap Seats 2010


Ramey DUI Video


Representative Randy Ramey pleads guilty to DUI


Bartlett Volunteer Fire Department Street Dance


The Truth about Global Warming


Examiner Editorials and Cheap Seats from the past

Forms and Newsstand Locations

Newsstand Locations


Carriers needed


Legal Newspaper

The Examiner U-46 News Feed

U-46 tax levy ratified via consent agenda approval


By Seth Hancock
  The Board of Education in School District U-46 unanimously approved, of the largest property tax levy allowed under the law at its meeting on Monday, Nov. 1.
  The vote for the levy resolution and determination of tax levy came under the consent agenda with no discussion. It comes after the board approved a $61 million increase in spending in this year’s budget while enrollment has declined for the seventh straight year.
  The levy hikes taxes by 2.2 percent from $335 million to $342.4 million in its property tax levy. The debt service levy is expected to slightly drop from $42.28 million to $42.23 million and the levy includes a 2.5 percent increase, $292.8 million to $300.2 million, for the corporate and special purpose levy but the district expects $297.9 million.
  The levy is determined by the Consumer Price Index (1.4 percent) and Equalized Assessed Valuation (EAV), where the district estimates property values increasing from $5.4 billion to $5.6 billion. However, the levy is set at an EAV of $5.7 billion as a defensive levy.
  The determination states it’s “still necessary to defensive levy to insure receipt of all property tax dollars to which the District is entitled.”
  The board also unanimously approved of $4.4 million in expenditure items and $11.2 million in itemized bills.
  The expenditures included $4 million (food and nutrition fund) for packaging materials.
  Also included was a $372,987 (operations and maintenance fund) to replace four pickup trucks with Roesch Ford ($166,248) and three vans and a dump truck from National Auto Fleet Group ($206,739). The vehicles were approved for replacement in May, according to the proposal, but supply chain disruptions delayed the delivery.




©2024 Examiner Publications, Inc.

Website Powered by Web Construction Set