Finance staff presented the village’s preliminary property tax-levy options and a timeline for notice and the Truth in Taxation hearing. Staff explained that as a non-home-rule community the village is more reliant on property tax and typically starts levy requests at the CPI (this year 3.4%) plus new construction. The presentation showed historical levy choices and illustrated how choosing not to take CPI in one year compounds lost revenue over subsequent years.
Jason said the 2023 levy totaled about $2.8 million, with roughly 65% directed to the police pension; the pension is currently about 61.9% funded and staff cited a state-funded target of 90% by 2040, meaning pension contributions will absorb a growing share of levy revenues. Staff presented model scenarios: 0% CPI (new construction only), a repeat of last year’s 2.5%, or the full 3.4% CPI request.
Trustees expressed a range of positions: some favored 0% with new construction only; others supported 2.5% as a compromise; one trustee preferred taking 3.4% because of pension needs. Chair recorded a working consensus of four trustees favoring 2.5% (no formal roll-call vote recorded at the meeting). Staff said they will publish notice for the Truth in Taxation hearing and return with the formal levy ordinance for the Dec. 2 hearing and vote.