Neilie Ericson, government affairs director for Illinois Realtors (Northwest Illinois Alliance), told the city council during public comment that the draft inspections ordinance for non-residential and multifamily structures creates legal and practical uncertainty.
"As written, we do believe that it creates uncertainty not just for us but property owners. It raises constitutional concerns," Ericson said, noting the draft includes a minimum fine range for non-compliance and references administrative warrants if owners decline interior inspections. She said the ordinance does not clearly define whether inspections cover interior individual units, common areas, or both, nor does it specify the standards against which properties will be measured.
Ericson urged council members to imagine being subject to the ordinance and asked whether they would clearly understand the obligations it imposes. She also highlighted unanswered questions about who grants access, how tenant refusals will be handled, timelines for inspections tied to tenant turnover or ownership changes, fee parity between commercial and multifamily properties, and whether a formal appeals process is included.
Council staff told Ericson and the meeting that the ordinance is at first reading and that a final version with changes would return in the coming weeks for further review.