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I'd love to lower taxes by attending 16 meetings a month, but ...

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The county's fiscal year starts in December, and the fiscal year for the schools and the community college starts in July. The fiscal year starts in May for our municipalities and park districts, and in April for our townships. It also starts in April for the conservation district, but state law gives them the right to delay budget approval until the end of the first quarter.

In short, in some County Board members' eyes, the only way to lower your taxes and save your homes is to never spend time in them by going straight from work to all these government meetings. If it's any consolation, the era of smart phones will allow your spouse or babysitter to send you videos of all the milestone moments of your children's first words, first walk, school play, birthdays, etc., that you'll be missing.

To be fair to county officials, I bounced their idea off of an irate taxpayer or two who reached out to me for my tax story that ran today. I asked Joe Greenwood, of Lake in the Hills, what bodies he pays into (and he's mighty sore that that his tax bill went up $1,000).

While I pay into eight bodies, he pays into almost a dozen - the taxing body mishmash of Lake in the Hills also has him in two park districts, a library districts and a sanitary district. I asked the married father of two teenage boys whether he intended to start fighting his tax bill by going to the monthly meetings of all 11 districts on his bill.

"I would love to do that, but I have to work 10, 12 hours a day to pay these property taxes, so I can't do that, no," Greenwood told me.

This convoluted system means that we the people can't stay involved in government. And for the record, we the people didn't come up with this system in which anything from a cemetery with three headstones to a mosquito spray truck can become its own tax district.

They the government did that, with the express intent of draining us all dry. And quite frankly, any taxpayer who has the free time to sit through all the meetings on their tax bill don't shouldn't get a pat on the back - they should get a gift card to Hobby Lobby.

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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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