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Reporter's Notebook: McHenry County Board winners and losers

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In the five years since my first McCullom Lake investigative stories ran, board members have privately told me that they would like to see a health department shakeup, and have expressed frustration that top health department leaders know they are “among friends” with the boards that are supposed to be watching them.

Regardless of what if anything happens, the era of downplaying follies and bad press as, "Well, it's the health department, what do you expect?" may very well be done.

HAMMERAND CORKED: Another glaring change is the removal of John Hammerand, R-Wonder Lake, as chairman of the Liquor and License Committee.

Hammerand was accused by his fellow committee members, the board at large, and the Northwest Herald’s editorial page of intentionally trying to delay a Hebron vineyard’s quest to get a class of license created to be able to open a winery.

After seven months, it finally moved out of committee after the three-member majority on the committee essentially staged a coup d’etat and moved it forward.

Koehler, who served as liquor commissioner as chairman (a responsibility now passed on to Hill), will now lead the committee. As a show of no hard feelings, the vice chairmanship goes to Diane Evertsen, R-Harvard, who like Hammerand opposed the winery plan.

UPDATE: Under a modified structure unveiled Dec. 19, the vice chairmanship goes to Robert Nowak, R-Cary, although Evertsen keeps her seat on the committee.

Hammerand keeps his seat on the powerful Finance and Audit Committee. He’s the most fiscally conservative member on the County Board, and local governments, quite frankly, need more Hammerands, not fewer.

UPDATE 2: The structure hashed out last week did not put Hammerand in any leadership role, but the Committee on Committees on Wednesday recommended giving him the vice chairmanship of the Management Services Committee.

NEW KIDS ON THE BLOCK: The sheer number of new members requires something that in the past would be unprecedented - at least two freshman members are in line for chairmanships.

Attorney Mary McClellan, R-Holiday Hills, will chair the Human Resources Committee and take the lead on the elected side in dealing with wages and benefits for union and non-union employees. Former chairman John Jung, R-Woodstock, will shift to head the Legislative and Intergovernmental Affairs Committee.

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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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