At a community meeting at Dolton's Village Hall, a presenter said their chief goal for housing and licensing is "to bring a better class of business to Dalton and also better landlords to Dalton," and urged enforcement and education to raise local property and storefront standards.
The presenter said the office intends to hold businesses accountable for licensing and condition, using liquor-store cleanliness as an example of local enforcement tied to licensing. "You want to update your license 'cause you want to sell liquor. I need your liquor store to be clean," the presenter said. They cited national chains operating locally — Walgreens, Menards and Family Dollar — as examples where corporate ownership does not always match local building conditions.
On rental housing, the presenter said landlords must be more engaged with properties under their name rather than relying on tenants to report problems. "It's our responsibility to tell the landlord what's going on with their property," the presenter said, arguing closer landlord involvement will improve living conditions for tenants.
A meeting participant asked about halfway houses. The presenter and the participant clarified that the village does not license halfway houses and that state authorities are responsible for licensing, inspection and compliance. The presenter said they would collect information from anyone who provides it and "find out who in the state is responsible for it," then follow up with the appropriate state office to pursue compliance.
The presenter concluded by thanking the room; other attendees applauded and acknowledged "brother Darion." No formal motions or votes were recorded during the remarks.
The presenter said they would contact the state office responsible for halfway-house oversight and follow up with the village as needed.