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Reporter's Notebook: McHenry County Board winners and losers

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Some newbie County Board members won, some board veterans lost, and health department brass could lose big under a major committee shakeup.

As I wrote over the weekend, the McHenry County Board Committee on Committees on Friday hashed out committee memberships and recommended chairmanships following the Nov. 6 election.

All 24 seats were up because of post-census redistricting, and the nine new members sworn in Dec. 3 make for the largest freshman class in at least 20 years. The first order of business for the new board was to replace four-term incumbent chairman Ken Koehler with Tina Hill, R-Woodstock.

This made for some big changes for the committees in which most of county government's work is done.

So if the full County Board goes along with the recommended structure – and any changes that Hill decides to make – who wins and who loses?

FEAR AND LOATHING IN THE MCDH: If anybody should be sweating the power shakeup, it's the gaffe-prone leadership of the McHenry County Department of Health across the street from the lawmakers.

The assignment of Donna Kurtz, R-Crystal Lake, as chairwoman of the Public Health and Human Services Committee is about an in-the-clear message as Hill can send that she has little interest in further mollycoddling of the health department or tolerating its, shall we say, idiosyncrasies.

If the pairing of Hill's name with the health department sounds familiar, it's because Hill is very closely tied to the ongoing McCullom Lake brain cancer lawsuits blaming 33 brain and pituitary tumor cases on air and groundwater pollution from the Rohm and Haas chemical plant in Ringwood. The plaintiffs include her sister and three of her childhood friends.

It's the same alleged cancer cluster that the health department repeatedly maintained does not exist, and whose cancer cluster "study" was exposed as flawed, biased and worthless in a series of award-winning Northwest Herald articles, which also showed that the health department has either routinely ignored or downright declined to share contrary data with the public.

Hill stepped in to force Koehler to seek outside research help, in essence to do the job that she felt the health department botched.

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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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