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We'll see whether our county tax dollars keep going to fight transparency laws

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Will the Freedom of Information Act and other Illinois open-government laws once again be in the crosshairs of the McHenry County Board’s lobbying group?

We’ll find out Thursday morning, whether the Legislative and Intergovernmental Affairs Committee talks about it or not.

On the committee’s agenda is a discussion of the legislation it wants to prioritize when the General Assembly’s next legislative session starts in January. That, of course, means they will identify the issues or bills the lobbyist with Metro Counties of Illinois asks lawmakers to support or oppose.

And as I revealed in an Aug. 23 story, the group that lobbies on behalf of the state’s 14 largest counties, and by proxy the county governments themselves, don't seem to think very highly of Illinois’ newly-strengthened sunshine laws.

Among the bills that Metro Counties is pushing during the present General Assembly:

• A bill allowing governments to publish their meeting and taxation notices on their websites rather than the local newspaper (because it’s more convenient for us to regularly visit a dozen government websites twice a month than to read the Northwest Herald over a bowl of Cheerios).

• A bill allowing governments to go into closed session to discuss “potential or real” fraud risks. (That won’t be abused, right? “The state is defrauding us with late state aid payments! Let’s talk about our budget in closed session ...”).

• A bill allowing governments to deny FOIA requests if the information requesters seek is online (if you’re too old to want a computer or too poor to buy one, well, maybe you should leave government to younger people with money).

Among the bills that Metro Counties is opposing:

• A bill requiring that meeting agendas be “sufficiently descriptive” for the public to determine what public bodies will discuss and vote upon (because you’re better off not knowing, especially in Illinois. Trust us. We’re the government.).

• Bills requiring the state website to have a searchable database of all county, township and municipal employee salaries, and an online database of local tax rates and to what funds they’re extended. (C’mon, you whiners, it’s not like your property tax bills increased while your home values fell or anything crazy like that.)

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About the Author

Kevin Craver

Senior reporter

Northwest Herald

Crystal Lake, IL

kcraver@shawmedia.com

Kevin has worked at the Northwest Herald since 2000. The Illinois Associated Press awarded his blog this year as the best news blog in the state for medium-sized newspapers. He has won more than 70 state and national journalism awards.

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