McHenry County board members spent an extended portion of the June 4 meeting debating whether to put a home-rule question before voters this year and whether the question should be binding or advisory.
A board member who introduced the topic said home rule would reverse Dillon Rule constraints and allow the county to legislate more local matters without waiting for Springfield guidance, and urged asking voters whether they prefer the change. "I think we ought to at least ask the voters of McHenry County if they'd like to look at it," the proponent said.
Opponents cautioned that home rule is not a panacea: state lawmakers can and do carve exemptions, and the change would introduce additional taxing authority (including sales-tax tools) and create an executive form of county government that would alter current governance dynamics. One member urged significant public education before placing the question on the ballot and favored a binding referendum if the board pursues the issue at all.
Members also raised timing questions: to appear on the November ballot the board would need to act by a statutory deadline in July/August to place the question on the ballot. Several members warned that an immediate push could be rushed and that the public might misunderstand the consequences.
No final vote was recorded at the June 4 audit meeting; members expressed a range of views, from fully supportive to skeptical, and many requested more staff analysis and an outreach plan before any formal action.
Sources: Board discussion during the June 4 meeting.