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A review, then how to choose chairman

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WOODSTOCK – The McHenry County Board will review its rules before it looks into a referendum to popularly elect its chairman.

The Management Services Committee agreed Monday morning to prioritize its post-election review of board rules before examining whether to put the question before voters in 2014. The 24-member board elects its chairman from among board members to a two-year term after each November general election.

But let it fall off the to-do list, committee member Michael Walkup warned, and the County Board again next year could face another citizen
referendum to change to a county executive form of government, as was attempted in November.

While state law limits an executive referendum to the November election, it takes only 500 signatures to get it on the ballot in a county of McHenry County’s size.

“We need to either put it on the ballot in the primary or take action well before [November 2014] to put it on the ballot before fall,” said Walkup, R-Crystal Lake.

Monday’s agreement means the committee will revisit a referendum by spring or early summer. Committee members likely will explore holding public meetings to gauge voter support for the idea.

By 2-to-1 margin in November, voters rejected a referendum to create a countywide elected executive, who under Illinois law wields wide-ranging powers, such as the power to hire staff and draft the budget. The referendum was spearheaded by state Rep. Jack Franks, D-Marengo, who had made other attempts to force the County Board to make the chairmanship directly elected.

The issue of electing the chairman got the newly elected County Board – one-third of whom are freshman members – off to an interesting start.

New board Chairwoman Tina Hill, R-Woodstock, gave the committee the task of exploring the referendum as its first order of business, citing voter interest in the topic.

But the committee’s first post-election meeting was not until Jan. 14, or a week before the deadline to put a referendum question on the April ballot.

A faction that included Walkup forced a special meeting of the full County Board after the committee discussed, but did not move forward with, a ballot question. Board members Jan. 18 narrowly defeated, 11-9, an April referendum for a chairman to be elected to a four-year term.

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