Fair
72°
Crystal Lake, IL
Fair
Forecast »

Reporter's Notebook: McHenry County Board winners and losers

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 1)

I suspect that the driving force behind appointing Kurtz isn’t just McCullom Lake, or even the previous debacle with the health department's mismanagement of Animal Control. It’s that the buck stops with Hill.

Every time the County Board has to clean up a health budget mess or some overzealous inspector decides to clamp down on a church picnic or other innocuous activity, she gets the nasty call. When a front-page story appears about "government run amok", such as when the Historical Society Museum was told it had to buy an expensive permit to serve coffee and cookies, it's Hill who has to deal with it.

The quote "government run amok" is from a 2009 story I wrote about health department food regulations. Who said it? Why, Hill did. Make that Chairwoman Hill.

From the point of view of Public Health Administrator Patrick McNulty, it gets worse. Kurtz has made a name for herself wanting to make the health department more accountable, and back in 2009 cited the department's handling of the cancer cluster as one of the reasons why she threw her hat into the ring to run for County Board. What's more, the Nov. 6 election cost the department former public health Chairwoman Virginia Peschke, in whose eyes McNulty could do little wrong.

More ominously, Hill sent another signal Friday that doesn't bode well for health department leadership. Health department employees are in fact hired and fired by the Board of Health. But it's the County Board that appoints the health board, and state law allows county boards to remove the members of appointed boards for "abuse and neglect". Hill let slip during Friday's meeting that she's been talking with the state's attorney's office about what constitutes abuse and neglect.

She didn't refer to any particular board, and she didn't mention it during the talk about the public health committee, but wow. Even if no purge comes, Kurtz's chairmanship comes with a voting seat on the health board.

The health department has been working on something of a free pass from scrutiny in recent years. Its fiercest critic on the board, Rick Klasen, died of a heart attack in 2006 and no one since has taken up his mantle. Until now, perhaps.

Comments

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.

Follow this blog:

Get updates from this blog when they happen by following it on Twitter or using its RSS feed.


Reader Poll

Have you ever run a charity 5K?

Yes
No