(75 ILCS 16/Art. 1 heading) ARTICLE 1.
SHORT TITLE AND
GENERAL PROVISIONS
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(75 ILCS 16/1-1)
Sec. 1-1.
Short title.
This Act may be cited
as the Public Library District Act of 1991.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/1-5)
Sec. 1-5.
Definitions.
For the purposes of this Act, unless the context
indicates otherwise, terms have the following meanings:
"Board" or "board of trustees" means a board of trustees created
under this Act to administer this Act.
"Certified copy" means a copy of any document within a library's control
that is certified by the secretary of the board as a true and accurate copy
of the original.
"Date of effectiveness" means the day a regulation or ordinance takes effect.
"Date of enactment" means the day a board adopts, by majority vote, an
ordinance or regulation.
"Day" means a calendar day.
"District" means a public library district established under this Act and
includes a proposed public library district.
"District library" means a library maintained and operated by a district.
"Election authority" means a county clerk or a board of election commissioners.
"Judge" means a judge of a circuit court of this State assigned to hear
any matter brought before him or her under this Act.
"Library" means a public library, including one privately endowed or
tax-supported or one established under this Act.
"Municipality" means a city, village, or incorporated town.
"Ordinance" means an enactment, adopted by majority vote of a board, that
applies to the public generally and that implements, applies, or prescribes
conduct, imposes a tax, imposes a fee or fine, or assesses a penalty or that
otherwise affects the rights of the public concerning the use or operation
of a library.
"Reciprocal agreement" means an agreement between a library and a
library agency for the provision of library services as needed by either party.
"Reciprocal borrowing" means the privilege of a person holding a valid
library registration card from a local library to borrow library materials
from other libraries.
"Regulation" means an enactment, adopted by majority vote of a board,
that concerns the internal management of a library, including but not
limited to enactments concerning personnel matters and the requisition of
books and personal property for the library.
"Resident" means a person residing within the geographic area within
which a tax is imposed to support a public library.
"Resolution" means a statement, adopted by majority vote of a board, that
establishes library policy and internal procedures for the governance of a
library.
"Territory", for purposes of annexation, means real estate
contiguous to a public library district that is delineated by definite
boundaries, including but not limited to a subdivision, plat, township,
or municipality.
"Trustee" means a trustee elected or appointed under this Act.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/1-10)
Sec. 1-10.
Establishment of districts and libraries.
To provide local public institutions of general education
for citizens of Illinois, library districts and libraries may be
established, equipped, and maintained by the board pursuant to this
Act. That library shall be forever for the use of the residents and taxpayers
of the district in which it is located, subject to reasonable rules and
regulations the board adopts to render the use of the library of the greatest
benefit to the greatest number of those residents and taxpayers.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/1-15)
Sec. 1-15.
Districts established under prior laws.
(a) Any library district established or formed under any prior
law, including those formed under "An Act authorizing the creation
of public library districts", approved May 26, 1943, "An Act in relation to the
creation of public library districts", approved May 16, 1957, or the Illinois
Public Library District Act, shall be deemed to have been established or formed
under this Act, notwithstanding the fact that the library district does not
meet all of the qualifications for the establishment or formation of library
districts set forth in this Act, and shall be subject to the provisions of this
Act. No further referendum need be held to authorize the levy of the annual
public library tax up to the limitation of Section 35-5.
(b) The trustees elected or appointed under this Act shall be the successors
to the trustees of districts established under any prior law repealed by
this Act or set forth in subsection (a), and all right, title and
interest in and to property of any type, and all rights and causes of action
existing or vested in trustees of districts created under any prior law, fully
vests in the trustees elected or appointed under this Act.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/1-20)
Sec. 1-20.
Violations of district ordinances; penalties.
(a) A person who violates an ordinance of a district that provides for
a penalty is guilty of a petty offense and shall be fined not less than
$25 nor more than $100 for each offense.
(b) All actions for violations shall be governed by and
processed as in the case of violations of municipal ordinances.
(c) All fines for violations of ordinances involving injury to or failure to
return any book, material, or property belonging to the library shall be paid
into the Library Fund established under Section 35-25. All fines and penalties
for the commission of injury upon the library or the grounds or other property
of the library shall be paid into the fund of the public agency or body
enforcing those ordinances.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/1-25)
Sec. 1-25.
Confidentiality of records.
Each library
subject to this Act is subject to the provisions
of the Library Records Confidentiality Act.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/1-30)
Sec. 1-30.
Notice.
(a) Notice of elections and referenda shall be given in the manner
provided by the Election Code.
(b) Whenever notice must be given by any other provision in this Act, the
notice shall be given by publication once in one or more daily or weekly
newspapers published or circulated in the district or, where no such newspaper
is published or circulated in the district, by posting 10 copies of the notice
in conspicuous places within the district as far separated from the others as
is conveniently possible. All notices shall be given at least 30 days before
the hearing or other matter being publicized by the notice unless otherwise
provided in this Act. A copy of the notice shall in each case be posted
at the library operated by the district. When the district does not operate
a library, a copy of the notice shall be posted at another public place
specified by ordinance.
(c) The notice of a referendum for establishment of, annexation
to, or inclusion within a district, transfer of territory to or from a
district, or merger of districts must include a map of the district and a legal
description of the district and must indicate the territory sought to be
annexed, included, transferred, or merged. If the territory sought to be
annexed, included, transferred, or merged encompasses the same territory as an
existing incorporated town, township, or county, the description of the
proposed district shall be by reference to that entity.
(d) Copies of all notices must be filed with the secretary of the district.
When an election to establish a district is sought by the petitioners, copies
of all notices must be filed with the petitions for the proposed district to be
formed under Sections 5-10 through 5-30. When a municipal or township library
is affected, copies of all notices must be filed with the mayor or
president of each municipality, or with the supervisor of each township, that
lies entirely or partially within the district or proposed district.
(e) Copies of a notice of a petition filed with a circuit court for
conversion of a public library to a library district shall be filed by
the petitioners as follows: when a municipal library is affected, with the
mayor or president of any municipality affected; when a township library is
affected, with the supervisor of the township affected; or when a county
library is affected, with the county board of the county affected.
(f) For the purpose of sending notice and for other purposes as
required by this Act, the official mailing address for a library that
contracts with another library for certain services is the official mailing
address established by
the library facility where the services are provided.
(g) Notices mailed to owners of real estate within a district or
proposed district or to voters shall be effective upon deposit in a United
States Post Office mailing facility, postage prepaid, correctly addressed
to the proper person.
(Source: P.A. 89-188, eff. 7-19-95.)
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(75 ILCS 16/1-35)
Sec. 1-35.
Election and referendum procedures.
(a) Elections and referenda provided for in this Act shall be conducted
at the time and in the manner provided by the Election Code.
(b) The Election Code shall govern elections under this Act, except that
provisions relating to political parties shall not be applicable to elections
under this Act, which shall be nonpartisan.
(c) The canvass of votes cast at an election under this Act shall be as
provided in Section 22-17 of the Election Code. The board of trustees
shall act as the canvassing board.
(d) If a candidate for the office of trustee dies before election day and is
nevertheless deemed elected, then the candidate on the ballot who receives the
next highest vote as compared with those votes cast for the deceased candidate
shall be deemed elected. If there is no such other candidate, there shall be a
vacancy.
(e) In the event of a tie vote in an election on a proposition, the
proposition shall fail.
(f) Any qualified voter in the district may contest the election
of any person to the office of trustee or the announced results of a referendum
within 30 days after the date of the election or referendum by commencing an
appropriate action in the circuit court of the
county that contains all or the larger portion of the district.
(g) The court costs and legal costs
incurred by the district involving an election contest shall be borne
by the district unless otherwise specified in this Act, but the expenses
incurred by any voter contesting any election shall not be an expense of the
district.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/1-40)
Sec. 1-40.
Ordinances.
(a) The contents, date of enactment, date of publication or posting, and
effective date of every district ordinance shall be determined from the records
of the district secretary and may be proved by the secretary's certificate
under the district seal. The secretary's certification shall be as provided in
Section 1-109 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
(b) Every ordinance shall contain an effective date, which shall be no
later than 60 days after the date of enactment.
(c) Every ordinance shall be numbered serially and shall be identified by
that number and the date of enactment.
(d) Every ordinance shall be posted in a public area of the district library
building within 3 days after the date of enactment and shall remain posted for
14 days.
(e) The district secretary shall maintain a certified copy of
every district ordinance at the library operated by the district and shall make
those copies available for public inspection.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/1-45)
Sec. 1-45.
Continued effectiveness of ordinances and regulations.
All
ordinances and regulations of a district shall continue in full force and
effect until amended or repealed, notwithstanding the enactment of this
Act.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/1-50)
Sec. 1-50.
Captions.
Article and Sec. captions in this Act are a part
of this Act but shall not limit, govern, or modify the meaning or intent of
other provisions of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/1-55) Sec. 1-55. Compliance with ITAP requirements. A library district must comply with the requirements of Section 405-335 of the Department of Central Management Services Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois concerning the Illinois Transparency and Accountability Portal (ITAP). A library district may not submit employment information for the ITAP in a manner that is inconsistent with the requirements of Section 405-335 of the Department of Central Management Services Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois.
(Source: P.A. 98-246, eff. 8-9-13.) |
(75 ILCS 16/Art. 5 heading) ARTICLE 5.
CREATION OF DISTRICT BY PETITION
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(75 ILCS 16/5-5)
Sec. 5-5.
Authorization.
All or any portion of the
territory within one or more counties
may, under this Act, be organized and formed into a district for the
purpose of levying a tax or taxes to pay for establishing, equipping,
maintaining, and supporting library services.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/5-10)
Sec. 5-10.
Petition to establish district.
(a) The organization of a district library in a territory without
a local tax supported library or in such a territory and contiguous territory
of a municipality, township, or county operating a local tax supported library
may be initiated as described in paragraph (1) or (2) of this subsection.
(1) One hundred or more of the voters of a territory | ||
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(2) The library board of a local tax supported | ||
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(b) The petition specified in this Section shall contain a legal description
of the boundaries of the territory to be embraced within the proposed district,
shall specify the name of the district and the proposed tax rate limit for the
district if it is in excess of 0.15%, and shall petition the circuit court to
set the date of a hearing on the petition before a judge of the circuit court.
If the territory of the proposed district encompasses the same
territory as an existing school district, municipality, township, or county,
the description of the proposed district may be by
reference to that entity.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/5-15)
Sec. 5-15.
Order for hearing; notice.
(a) Upon the submission of the petition to the circuit court as provided in
Section 5-10, the circuit court shall enter an order setting the date of the
hearing on the petition and naming the judge who will preside at the hearing.
(b) The petitioners shall publish notice of the time, date, and place of the
hearing, including the name of the judge who will preside at the hearing. The
notice shall be published in accordance with Section 1-30. The petitioners
shall also, concurrently with the publication of the notice of the hearing,
send notice of the hearing and a copy of the petition to the board of trustees
of each public library serving an area contiguous to or within the proposed
library district boundaries.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/5-20)
Sec. 5-20.
Hearing.
At the hearing ordered under Section 5-15, the
petitioners shall present proof of the notice of the hearing and of
the matters alleged in the petition to the presiding judge. All
persons residing within the proposed district shall have a reasonable
opportunity to be heard regarding the location of the boundaries of
the proposed district and to make suggestions regarding the
boundaries.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277 .)
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(75 ILCS 16/5-25)
Sec. 5-25.
Order for election; notice.
(a) The judge, after hearing the statements, evidence, and suggestions
of the petitioners and other persons appearing before the court, shall enter an
order calling an election. The order shall do the following:
(1) Fix the boundaries of the proposed district. For | ||
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(2) Require a map to be prepared depicting (i) the | ||
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(3) Designate the regular election when the election | ||
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(b) In addition to the requirements of the Election Code, notice of the
election shall specify the purpose of the election and contain a map and legal
description of the proposed district.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/5-30)
Sec. 5-30.
Election; form of proposition.
(a) The proposition at the election shall be
in substantially the following form:
Shall a public library district be established in all | ||
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(b) If no tax rate limit is specified in the ballot, the tax rate limit
of the newly organized district shall be as set forth in Section 35-5. If,
however, the petitioners, under Section 5-10, specify a rate higher than the
rate set forth in Section 35-5, the proposition shall be in substantially the
following form:
Shall a public library district be established in all | ||
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In no event shall the tax rate exceed the maximum tax rate set forth in
Section 35-10.
(c) A proposition for the establishment of a public library district shall
not be submitted to the voters in the proposed district more often than once in
a 12-month period.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/5-35)
Sec. 5-35.
Election results.
(a) The election authority shall, within 10 days after the election, file
with the circuit court ordering the election its certificate setting
forth the results of the election in each precinct.
(b) The judge assigned to hear the case shall enter a final judgment
setting forth the results of the election based upon the certificate filed
in the court by the election authority, and the order shall become a part of
the records of the court.
(c) The question of establishment of a district shall be based upon the
majority of votes cast on the question by the voters of the proposed
territory determined as follows:
(1) Where the proposed territory does not include a | ||
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(2) Where the proposed territory does include a | ||
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(3) Where the proposed territory includes a township | ||
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(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/5-40)
Sec. 5-40.
Transfer and sharing of assets.
(a) Any assets, including real and personal property and tax and other
monies, received or due for the purposes of the library and held by the
corporate authority of a municipal, township, or county library included in the
library district, shall be transferred to the library district. "Property"
includes any building or buildings permanently occupied by and publicly
designated as the library building or buildings and used solely for library
purposes.
(b) Nothing in Section 5-35 or 5-45 or this Section
shall preclude a municipality, township, or county,
by written agreement, from sharing a library building or buildings
with a district library when the establishment of a
library district has been approved and the district includes wholly within its
territory a municipal, township, or county library.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/5-45)
Sec. 5-45.
Authorization to levy tax.
When the establishment of a library
district has been approved and the district includes wholly within its
territory a municipal, township, or county library, only the library district
shall levy the annual public library tax.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/Art. 10 heading) ARTICLE 10.
CONVERSION OF
TAX SUPPORTED PUBLIC LIBRARY TO
PUBLIC LIBRARY DISTRICT
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(75 ILCS 16/10-5)
Sec. 10-5.
Application.
This Article shall not apply in any municipality
having a population greater than 500,000.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/10-10)
Sec. 10-10.
Conversion by library board resolution and referendum.
(a) A tax supported public library in a municipality, county, or
township maintained and operated under any other Act may, by conversion, become
a library organized, maintained, and operated under this Act
by resolution of the public library board of trustees and referendum
as provided in this Section.
(b) The board of trustees of a tax supported public library desiring
to convert the existing library to a library district may adopt a resolution
calling for the conversion. The board shall certify the question of conversion
to the proper election authority, who shall submit the question to the voters
at the next regular election. If the board specifies in its resolution that the
converted library shall have a maximum tax rate in excess of the existing
ceiling or limitation of the library to be converted, the question shall so
specify. Notice of the election shall be given in accordance with Section
1-30.
(c) The proposition shall be submitted to the voters in substantially the
following form:
Shall the board of trustees of the public library in | ||
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(d) If the resolution specified a maximum tax rate in excess of the
existing ceiling or limitation, the proposition shall be
submitted to the voters in substantially the following form:
Shall the board of trustees of the public library in | ||
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(e) If a majority of the votes cast on the
proposition are in the affirmative,
the board of trustees shall convert the public library to
a public library district.
(f) This Section shall not apply to any library established by
the corporate authorities of a municipality under the Illinois Local
Library Act.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/10-15)
Sec. 10-15.
Conversion by library board resolution and approval of
corporate authorities.
(a) The board of trustees of a tax supported public library
desiring to convert the existing library to a library maintained and
operated under this Act may, rather than utilizing the
procedures prescribed in Section 10-5, adopt a resolution calling for
the conversion and requesting the approval of the conversion by the
corporate authorities of the municipality, county, or township maintaining
the existing library. If the corporate authorities approve the conversion
within 60 days after the resolution is adopted by the board of trustees,
the board of trustees shall convert the public library to a public library
district.
(b) Any library in a home rule unit, as defined in Article VII,
Section 6, of the Illinois Constitution, converted under this Section shall
have a maximum tax rate not to exceed the greater of 0.15% or the last
rate levied by the municipality for library purposes for the most recent year
before the conversion, and that rate shall not be subject to any rate
limitations or referendum requirements imposed by this Act. That
rate may thereafter be increased, however, as provided in Section 35-10.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/10-20)
Sec. 10-20.
Contents of county library board resolution.
Notwithstanding
any other provision of this Act, whenever after August 30, 1989 the board of
trustees of a tax supported public library adopt a resolution under Section
10-10 or 10-15 calling for conversion of a county library in existence on
August 30, 1989 to a public library district, the resolution shall specify the
following:
(1) The number of trustees to be elected for the new | ||
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(2) The maximum number of trustees who may reside in | ||
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(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/10-25)
Sec. 10-25.
Conversion by petition and referendum.
(a) An election for conversion of a public library established in any
municipality, county, or township shall be called upon
the filing of a petition signed by not less than 10% of the voters (or, if
there are 100 or fewer voters, then a majority of the voters) residing within
that territory. The petition shall be addressed
to and filed simultaneously with the board
of library trustees of the existing public library and the corporate
authorities of the municipality, county, or township.
The original petition shall be filed with the corporate authorities.
(b) The petition shall specify the new maximum tax rate of the public
library district and state the existing tax rate of the public library to be
converted if the rate is to be in excess of the existing ceiling or limitation
of the library converted.
(c) Upon receipt of a certified copy of the petition, the board of library
trustees shall, within 30 days, file with the corporate authorities an addendum
to the petition setting forth (i) the establishment date of the existing public
library, (ii) the lawful ceiling on its public library tax levies, (iii) the
geographic area of territory involved, and (iv) the identity of the
municipality, county, or township involved.
(d) The corporate authorities shall certify the question to the proper
election authority, who shall submit to the voters of the district the question
of conversion at an election in accordance with the Election Code.
The proposition shall be submitted to the voters in substantially the following
form:
Shall the public library in (name of municipality, | ||
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(e) If the petition specified a maximum tax rate in excess of the existing
ceiling or limitation, the proposition shall be submitted in substantially the
following form:
Shall the public library in (name of municipality, | ||
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(f) If a majority of the votes cast on the proposition are in the
affirmative, the board of library trustees shall convert the public library
to a public library district, with the maximum annual public library tax
rate specified in the proposition.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/10-30)
Sec. 10-30.
Limitation on referendum.
A proposition for the conversion of a
public library to a public library district shall not be submitted to the
voters more often than once every 2 years.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/10-35)
Sec. 10-35.
Petition by library trustees for court order.
(a) If the voters in the election resulting from the board of library
trustees' resolution to convert under Section 10-10, or from the petition of
the voters calling for a referendum under Section 10-25, approve the conversion
to a library district, or if the appropriate corporate authorities approve the
conversion under Section 10-20, the board of library trustees of the public
library affected shall, within 30 days, petition the circuit court of the
county in which the majority of the territory affected lies for a final order
to convert the public library to a library district. The petition shall
incorporate, if applicable, the election results and the addendum to
the petition for the election.
(b) The circuit court, upon finding the petition
sufficient, shall enter its final order doing the following:
(1) Approving the conversion of the existing public | ||
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(2) Naming the district.
(3) Designating all incumbent library trustees as | ||
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(4) Fixing the boundary of the newly formed district.
(5) Specifying the ceiling or limitation upon the | ||
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(6) Specifying the first fiscal year of the newly | ||
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(7) Specifying the first year when appropriation and | ||
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(8) Specifying the effective date of (i) the | ||
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(9) Specifying the date when the newly formed | ||
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(c) The trustees of the newly formed district shall promptly publish notice
of the order and of its effect.
(d) The order shall be effective not later than 30 days after the date of
its entry.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/10-40)
Sec. 10-40.
Existing bond issue.
An existing bond issue shall not be
affected by a conversion under this Article and shall continue in full force
and effect under the laws governing the bond issue.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/10-45)
Sec. 10-45.
Transfer of assets and liabilities; sharing library building.
(a) Whenever a tax supported library in a county, township, or municipality
has been converted to a public library district under this Article, all of the
assets (including any building or buildings (i) solely occupied by and publicly
designated as the library building or buildings and (ii) solely
used for library purposes) and any liabilities of the public tax supported
library's board of library trustees in connection with the operation of
its library shall become the assets and liabilities of the public library
district. If the library converted to a public library district was
eligible to receive its proportionate share of the Personal Property Tax
Replacement Fund, that eligibility shall continue to apply to the public
library district created by the conversion.
(b) Nothing in this Section shall preclude a municipality, township, or
county, by written agreement, from sharing a library building or buildings with
a district library if the establishment of a district library has been approved
and the district includes wholly within its territory a municipal, township, or
county library.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/10-50)
Sec. 10-50.
Continuation of public library tax levy.
In any county or
counties in which more than one year will elapse between the effective date of
the final order entered by the circuit court and the levy of an annual public
library tax of the district library created as a result of a conversion, the
corporate authority of the public tax supported library shall continue the
library's levy.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/10-55)
Sec. 10-55.
Employee retirement program.
When the employees of a public tax
supported library of a county, municipality, or township are participating in
an employer provided Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund or other retirement or
pension program and the library is converting to a library district under this
Article, the corporate authority shall continue to provide coverage under the
retirement or pension program until the newly established district library
provides retirement or pension program coverage. In no case, however, shall the
corporate authority extend its coverage for more than 547 days after the
effective date of the circuit court's final order of establishment. Any
payments made by the corporate authority for coverage shall be reimbursed by
the district library.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/10-60)
Sec. 10-60.
Home rule unit library; reduction of tax levy.
If a tax
supported public library of a home rule unit, as defined in Article VII,
Section 6, of the Illinois Constitution, converts to a public library district
under this Article, that home rule unit, for the year following the year of
conversion, shall reduce its property tax levy by the amount levied by the home
rule unit for the most recent year before the conversion.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/10-65)
Sec. 10-65.
Inclusion of area subject to local library tax.
If a tax
supported public library of a governmental unit that levies a tax within an
area pursuant to a referendum held under subsection (c) of Section 3-7 of the
Illinois Local Library Act converts to a public library district under this
Article, all of that area shall be included within the newly created district.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/Art. 15 heading) ARTICLE 15.
ADDITION OR
DISCONNECTION OF TERRITORY
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(75 ILCS 16/15-5)
Sec. 15-5. Annexation of contiguous territory. Territory outside of any
district but contiguous to the district may be annexed as provided in Sections
15-10 through 15-45, and each of these Sections constitutes an independent authorization for the annexation of contiguous territory.
(Source: P.A. 94-899, eff. 6-22-06.)
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(75 ILCS 16/15-10)
Sec. 15-10. Uninhabited private property within municipality.
(a) Territory within the boundaries of a municipality that has no
voters residing in it and that consists in whole or in part of private
property may be annexed to the district as provided in this Section.
(b) A written petition describing the territory and signed by the owners
of record of all land within the territory may be filed with the Board
of Trustees of the library district. The petition, made under oath, shall
request annexation and state that no voters reside within the territory. The
trustees shall then, by ordinance, annex the described territory. No referendum
need be held.
(c) The board of trustees of the library district may adopt an ordinance
indicating the district's intention to annex the territory. Prior to adopting this ordinance, the board of trustees of the library district shall send notice of the proposed ordinance to the president of the board of trustees of each public library located within one mile of the territory to be annexed. The library district may, in addition, provide notice of a proposed annexation ordinance on a website maintained by the library district. At any meeting of the board of trustees in which an annexation order under this Section is considered, the board shall provide a reasonable opportunity for any interested person to make public comments on the proposed annexation ordinance. The ordinance shall
contain a description of the territory and a statement that no voters reside in
the territory. Within 15 days of the passage of the annexation ordinance, the library district shall send notice of the adoption of the ordinance and a copy of the map showing the boundaries of the territory to be annexed to the president of the board of trustees of each public library located within one mile of the territory to be annexed. Upon a 60 day written notice of the ordinance to each of the
owners of record of the territory to be annexed and a written receipt of the
notice from each such owner, the trustees shall by ordinance annex the
described territory. No referendum need be held.
(d) If an objection to the inclusion in the proposed annexation is filed by
an owner of record or a written receipt of notice is not returned by an owner
of record in the 60 day period, the property of that owner of record will be
excluded from the annexation.
(e) In no case, however, may territory not contiguous to
the district or to territory being annexed to the district be annexed.
(Source: P.A. 95-161, eff. 1-1-08.)
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(75 ILCS 16/15-15)
Sec. 15-15. Territory included within municipality or school district.
(a) A district may, by ordinance and referendum, annex territory if that territory is: (1) located within the boundaries of a municipality | ||
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(2) contiguous to the district; and (3) without local, tax-supported public library | ||
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An ordinance under this subsection must describe the territory to be annexed.
Prior to adopting the ordinance, the board of trustees of the library district shall send notice of the proposed ordinance to the president of the board of trustees of each public library located within one mile of the territory to be annexed. The library district may, in addition, provide notice of a proposed annexation ordinance on a website maintained by the library district. At any meeting of the board of trustees in which an annexation ordinance under this Section is considered, the board shall provide a reasonable opportunity for any interested person to make public comments on the proposed annexation ordinance.
(b) Within 15 days of the passage of the
annexation ordinance, the library district shall send notice of the
adoption of the ordinance, a copy of the map showing the boundaries of the
territory to be annexed, and a copy of the text of the publication notice
required in this Section to the president of the board of trustees of each
public library with territory within one mile of the territory to be
annexed. Within 15 days after the adoption of the ordinance it shall be
published as provided in Section 1-30. The board may vacate an
annexation ordinance before its publication.
(c) The publication or posting of the ordinance shall include a notice of
the question of the adoption of the ordinance to be submitted to the voters of the
district or the territory to be annexed and the date of the prospective referendum.
(d) Upon the passage of the annexation ordinance under this Section, the
board of trustees shall certify the question
to the proper election authority, who shall submit the question at the next
regular election. Notice of this election shall be given and the election
shall be conducted in accordance with the Election Code. The proposition shall
be submitted to the voters in substantially the following form:
Shall (description of territory) be annexed to (name | ||
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(e) If a majority of votes cast upon the proposition in the
district, and also a majority of votes cast upon the proposition in the
territory to be annexed, are in favor of the proposition, the Board
of Trustees of the library district may conclude the annexation of the
territory.
(f) If, before the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly, a district has annexed territory under this Section, that annexation is hereby validated, ratified, and declared to be in full force and effect.
(Source: P.A. 101-99, eff. 7-19-19.)
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(75 ILCS 16/15-20)
Sec. 15-20. (Repealed).
(Source: P.A. 87-1277. Repealed by P.A. 101-99, eff. 7-19-19.)
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(75 ILCS 16/15-25)
Sec. 15-25.
Territory designated for use as street or highway.
A library district by ordinance may annex contiguous territory
dedicated for use as a street or highway under the jurisdiction
of the Illinois Department of Transportation or a county or
township highway department if no part of the annexed territory
is within any other library district. No referendum need be
held.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/15-30)
Sec. 15-30.
Petition of property owners.
A library district by ordinance
may annex contiguous private property upon receiving a petition by the owner or
owners of record of the property for annexation.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/15-35)
Sec. 15-35.
Uninhabited territory included within municipality.
Notwithstanding the provisions of Sections 15-5 through 15-30, 15-40, and
15-45, whenever a municipality included entirely or partially within a library
district has annexed or otherwise includes within the municipality's boundaries
territory contiguous to the district and not in another public library's taxing
district, and the territory has no voters residing in it, the library district
by ordinance may annex the territory to the district.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/15-45)
Sec. 15-45.
Territory annexed.
(a) For the purpose of Sections 15-5 through 15-40, any territory to be
annexed to a library district shall be considered contiguous to the district
notwithstanding that the territory is separated from the library district
by a railroad right-of-way, but upon annexation the area included
within the right-of-way shall not be considered to be annexed
to the library district.
(b) Upon the annexation of territory by a district, the
boundary shall extend to the far side of any adjacent highway and shall
include all of every highway within the area annexed. These highways shall
be considered to be annexed even though not included in the legal
description set forth in the petition for annexation or the annexation
ordinance.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/15-50)
Sec. 15-50.
Annexation of territory without tax supported public library
service. Territory without tax supported public library service outside of any
district, but contiguous to the district, may be annexed to the district by
referendum as provided in Sections 15-55 through 15-80.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/15-55)
Sec. 15-55.
Petition of residents or library district board; notice.
(a) Upon the filing of a petition with the circuit court of the county
that contains all of the territory of the district or the larger part of the
district, signed by not fewer than 100 voters residing within any territory
proposed to be annexed, or upon the filing of a petition by a board of trustees
of a library district seeking to annex that territory, the circuit court shall
enter an order setting forth the date a hearing will be held on the petition
and naming the judge who will preside at the hearing.
(b) The petitioner shall publish notice of the time, date, and place of
the hearing and the name of the judge who will preside at the hearing. The
notice shall be published as provided in Section 1-30 and shall be published in
the district and in the county that contains all or the larger portion of the
proposed district. The petitioner also shall send, concurrently with the
publication of the notice of the hearing, a notice of the hearing and a map
showing the boundaries of the territory to be annexed to the President of
the Board of Trustees of each public library with territory within one mile
of the territory to be annexed.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/15-60)
Sec. 15-60.
Hearing.
At the hearing, the petitioners shall present proof of
the notice of the hearing and the matters set forth in the petition to the
judge assigned to the case. All persons residing within the proposed district
shall have a reasonable opportunity to be heard regarding the boundaries of the
proposed district and to make suggestions regarding the boundaries.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/15-63)
Sec. 15-63.
Court order.
The judge, after hearing the statements, evidence,
and suggestions of the petitioners and other persons appearing before the
court, shall enter a final judgment that shall do the following:
(1) Fix the boundaries of the territory proposed to | ||
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(2) Require a map to be prepared depicting the | ||
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(3) Certify the proposition to the proper election | ||
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(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/15-65)
Sec. 15-65.
Referendum; order concerning results.
(a) Each voter within the territory proposed to be annexed and each voter
within the district has the right to cast a ballot.
(b) If a majority of the votes cast upon the question in the district, and
also a majority of the votes cast upon the question in the territory to be
annexed, are in favor of the proposition, the entire territory may be annexed.
Where there are 2 or more precincts in the territory proposed to be annexed,
however, if a majority of the votes cast upon the question by those voting in
the district, and also a majority of the votes cast upon the question by those
voting in any contiguous precinct in the territory proposed to be annexed, are
in favor of the proposition, the precinct so voting shall be annexed.
(c) The proposition shall be in substantially the following form:
Shall (description of territory) be annexed to (name | ||
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(d) The judge assigned to the matter shall enter an order setting forth
the results of the election based upon the certificate filed with the judge by
the election authority, and the order shall become a part of the records of
the court. Where more than one county is involved in the election, a copy
of the original petition, the order calling for the election, and the order
setting forth the election results shall be filed by the election authority
in the circuit court of each county affected or involved.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/15-70)
Sec. 15-70.
District library building within municipality that is
partially within district.
(a) If a library district has a public library building within the corporate
limits of a municipality located partially within the public library district
and if the municipality is located partially within a township that does not
maintain a public library building within the portion of the municipality
located outside the public library district, then the library district may
annex the territory within the municipality located outside of the library
district as provided in this Section.
(b) There shall be filed, with the secretary of the district seeking to
have the territory annexed, a written petition signed by not less
than 100 voters residing within that portion of the municipality located
outside the public library district. A petition may be signed by a majority
of the voters residing in the territory sought to be annexed if
there are fewer than 100 voters residing in that territory.
(c) After a petition is filed, the district secretary shall certify the
question to the proper election authority, who shall submit the question of
annexation to all voters residing within the territory proposed to be annexed
and to all voters already within the district. Notice of this election shall be
given and the election shall be conducted in accordance with the Election Code.
If a majority of the votes cast upon the question by those in the territory
proposed to be annexed and a majority of the votes cast by those voting within
the district are in favor of the proposition, the territory may be annexed.
(d) The proposition shall be submitted to the voters in substantially the
same form as set forth in subsection (c) of Section 15-65.
(e) The judge assigned to the matter shall enter an order setting forth
the results of the election based upon the certificate filed with the court by
the election authority, and the order shall become a part of the records of
the court. Where more than one county is involved in the election, a copy
of the original petition, the order calling for the election, and the order
setting forth the election results shall be filed by the election authority
in the circuit court of each county affected or involved.
(f) In the event of an annexation under this Section, the residents of that
portion of any township that is so annexed into the public library district
concerned shall remain liable for their proportionate share of the bonded
indebtedness outstanding as of the date of annexation, if any, of the township,
with respect to establishment or maintenance of any public library building of
the township. The township may continue to levy and extend taxes upon the
taxable property of the annexed portion of the township for the purpose of
amortizing the bonds until sufficient funds to retire the bonds have been
collected.
(g) A proposition for annexing territory to a district shall not be
submitted to the voters more often than once a year.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/15-75)
Sec. 15-75.
Conflicting annexations.
If 2 or more districts under Sections
15-5 through 15-70 adopt ordinances on the same date annexing the same
territory, the conflict in the annexation shall be decided by the State
Librarian with the advice of the Illinois State Library Advisory Committee.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/15-80)
Sec. 15-80.
Recording annexation ordinance and map.
A copy of each annexation
ordinance of any library district annexing territory, together with an accurate
map of the territory annexed, shall be deposited with and recorded by the
recorder and filed with the county clerk of the county in which the annexed
territory is situated.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/15-82) Sec. 15-82. Disconnection of municipalities and townships; advisory question; disconnection procedures. (a) An advisory question of public policy concerning the disconnection of a municipality or township from the public library district may be placed on the ballot (i) upon the adoption of an ordinance by the governing body of the municipality or township or (ii) when 5% of the legal voters of the public library district present a petition to the board of trustees requesting the advisory question. The governing body adopting an ordinance or the board of trustees receiving a petition must certify the question to the proper election authority, which, in accordance with the Election Code, must submit the question to the electors at the next regularly scheduled election in each public library district in which the municipality or township is located. The election authority must submit the question in substantially the following form: Should the (insert name of township or municipality) | ||
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The votes must be recorded as "Yes" or "No".
(b) Regardless of the occurrence or outcome of any advisory question under subsection (a), the governing body of a municipality or township may adopt an ordinance to disconnect the territory of the municipality or township from the public library district. Any ordinance adopted under this subsection shall not take effect until it is approved by the board of trustees of each public library district in which any part of the municipality or township is located. (c) If the disconnecting entity is a city, then, no later than 90 days after the adoption of the disconnection ordinance, the governing body of the city must establish and maintain a public library under Section 2-1 of the Illinois Local Library Act. If the disconnecting entity is an incorporated town, a village, or a township, then, no later than 90 days after the adoption of the disconnection ordinance, the governing body of the incorporated town, village, or township must adopt an ordinance for a referendum to establish a public library under Section 2-2 of the Illinois Local Library Act. (d) After an ordinance to establish and maintain a library is adopted by a city under Section 2-1 of the Illinois Local Library Act or after the approval by the electors in an incorporated town, a village, or a township of a referendum to establish and maintain a library under Section 2-2 of the Illinois Local Library Act, the municipality or township shall file with the circuit court in which a majority of the disconnected territory lies an appropriate petition and a certified copy of the disconnection ordinance. The petition shall request entry of an order of disconnection and the preparation of an appraisal setting forth the value of the tangible property of the district, the liabilities of the district, and the excess of the liabilities over tangible assets or property. Notice shall be published by and within the disconnecting territory. The circuit court shall, after a hearing upon the matter, enter its order revising the limits and boundaries of the district and setting forth the liability, if any, yet to be retired and paid for by the property owners of the disconnected territory. (e) When any territory has been disconnected from a district under this Section and the court order providing for the disconnection also sets forth a continuing liability to be paid by the property owners of the disconnected territory, then the county collector of each county affected shall debit upon his or her books the taxes to be paid and thereafter levied by the district and extended against taxable property within the disconnected territory. The county clerk shall continue to extend district library taxes upon the taxable property within the disconnected territory, and the county collector shall continue to collect district library taxes upon the taxable property within the disconnected territory until the excess liability has been paid and retired. The residents and property owners of the disconnected territory are entitled to full and free library service from the district until the earlier of: (i) the final and full payment of the liability; or (ii) the entry of the disconnection order by the court. Upon the date of disconnection, the residents and property owners of the disconnected territory shall no longer be subject to any tax levies by the district other than levies for the excess liability. Upon full and final payment of the liability and thereafter, no resident or property owner of the disconnected territory shall have any right, title, and interest in and to the assets and tangible property of the district affected by the disconnection.
(f) The board must record a certified copy of the disconnection order with the recorder of deeds and with the county clerk and county collector of each county affected.
(Source: P.A. 94-681, eff. 11-3-05.) |
(75 ILCS 16/15-85)
Sec. 15-85. Automatic disconnection from district.
(a) Any territory within a public library district that is or
has been annexed to a municipality (where that municipality maintains a
public library) is, by operation of law, disconnected from the public
library district as of the January first next after the territory is annexed. (a-5) If at anytime prior to, on, or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, the City of Springfield, Illinois, annexes territory within the Chatham Area Public Library District, or any successor thereto, for the development and construction of the proposed Hunter Lake to serve as an additional water supply for the City of Springfield and under subsection (a) that territory is disconnected from the Chatham Area Public Library District, then all remaining territory of the Chatham Area Public Library District is nevertheless deemed contiguous for the purposes of this Act. The remaining territory continues to be a part of the Chatham Area Public Library District or any successor thereto.
(b) A disconnection by operation of law under this Section does not
occur if, within 60 days after the annexation, the public library
district files with the appropriate circuit court a petition alleging that the
disconnection will cause the territory remaining in the district to be
noncontiguous or that the loss of assessed valuation by reason of the
disconnection will impair the ability of the district to render fully
adequate library service to the territory remaining in the district.
(c) When a petition is filed under subsection (b), the
court shall set it for hearing. At the hearing, the district has the
burden of proving the truth of the allegations in its petition. In
determining whether to grant the petition, the court may
consider at least the following factors:
(i) whether disconnection will cause the territory | ||
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(ii) whether the loss of assessed valuation by reason | ||
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(iii) the convenience of the residents of the annexed | ||
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(iv) whether the city, village, or incorporated town | ||
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The Court may consider comments by the Illinois State Library, the annexing
municipality and its public library, and the library system or systems to which
the affected libraries belong. This does not create a right of intervention in
these parties.
(d) After the hearing, the Court may grant the relief it deems
appropriate, including, but not limited to, any of the following: (i)
denial of the disconnection; (ii) disconnection of the territory from the
public library district; (iii) disconnection of the territory from the
public library district in parts over a specific period of time not to exceed
5 years; (iv) court approval of a voluntary agreement between the parties
that provides for the sharing of real estate tax revenues from the annexed
territory for a limited period of time not to exceed 5 years unless
extended by mutual agreement of the parties; or (v)
submission of the question of disconnection of the territory to the
electors of the annexed territory at a referendum to be held at the next
general election in accordance with the general election law. The
proposition at such a referendum shall be in substantially the following form:
Shall (describe annexed territory) be disconnected | ||
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If a referendum is held, the result of the election shall be entered of
record in the Court. If a majority of votes cast upon the question in the
annexed territory are for disconnection of the annexed territory from the
public library district, the territory shall be disconnected from the
public library district.
(e) If there are any general obligation bonds of the public library district
outstanding and unpaid at the time the territory is disconnected from the
public library district by operation of this Section, the disconnected
territory shall remain liable for its proportionate share of that bonded
indebtedness, and the public library district may continue to levy and extend
taxes upon the taxable property in the territory for the purpose of amortizing
the bonds until sufficient funds to retire the bonds have been collected.
(f) The county clerk must extend taxes to pay the principal of and
interest
on any general obligation bonds issued to refund any bond described in
subsection (e), as provided in the bond ordinances on file in the office of the
county clerk, against all taxable property in the district, including taxable
property that was in the district on the date that the bonds being refunded
were issued; provided, however, that (i) the net interest rate on the refunding
bonds may not exceed the net interest rate on the refunded
bonds, (ii) the final maturity date of the refunding bonds may not extend
beyond the final maturity date of the refunded bonds, and (iii) the debt
service payable on the refunding bonds in any year may not exceed the debt
service that would have been payable on the refunded bonds in that year. This
subsection is
inoperative after June 30, 2002.
(Source: P.A. 96-249, eff. 8-11-09.)
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(75 ILCS 16/15-90)
Sec. 15-90.
Transfer of contiguous territory to adjoining district.
(a) Territory that is in a public library district and contiguous with
another library district may be transferred to the latter district. Upon the
mutual agreement of the boards of trustees of the contiguous districts to the
transfer of the territory, each board shall enact a transfer ordinance
containing identical language describing the territory to be transferred, the
effective date of the transfer, a statement of the assets and liabilities, if
any, that are a responsibility of the transferred territory, and the settlement
of any excess of assets or liabilities.
(b) A copy of the transfer ordinance shall be filed with the
circuit court of the county that contains all or the larger part of the
territory. Upon receiving the ordinance, the circuit court shall enter an
order setting forth the date, time, and place of a hearing upon the subject
matter of the ordinance, name the judge to hear the cause, and send notice of
the date, time, and place of the hearing and of the judge assigned to the
president of the board of trustees of each of the involved public library
districts and to the secretary of the board of trustees of the public library
district containing the territory proposed to be transferred. The date set for
the hearing shall be not less than 30 days nor more than 60 days after the
circuit court enters the order for the hearing. The secretary of the board of
trustees of the public library district containing the territory proposed to be
transferred shall, within 15 days of the secretary's receipt of the circuit
court's notice of the hearing, publish notice of the hearing as provided in
Section 1-30.
(c) At the hearing before the assigned judge of the circuit court, the
validity of the ordinance, including substantiation of the required
allegations in the petition, the appropriateness of the location and
boundary of the territory to be voted upon for transfer, and
other relevant matters shall be considered. All persons residing
in the territory to be transferred, all other persons having an interest in
the proposed transfer, and the boards of trustees of the involved library
districts shall have a reasonable opportunity to be heard upon the subject
of the proposed transfer. The judge's determination of the
appropriateness of the boundary of the territory proposed to be transferred
shall include the following factors:
(1) The location of the residents in relationship to | ||
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(2) Maintaining the pre-existing non-residential tax | ||
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(3) Local traditional traffic, transportation, and | ||
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The judge, after hearing the statements, evidence, and suggestions of the
persons appearing at the hearing, shall determine (i) whether the ordinance is
valid and sufficient according to law and (ii) whether the territory to be
transferred would receive substantially equal or greater benefits by being
transferred. If the transfer ordinance is found to be
valid and sufficient, and the territory to be transferred would receive
substantially equal or greater benefits by being so transferred, the judge
shall enter a final judgement to transfer the territory.
(d) The judge assigned to the case shall, after a hearing upon the merits,
enter an order revising the boundaries of the district and setting forth
the liability, if any, yet to be retired and paid by the property owners
of the transferred territory. The liability shall be collected
under Section 35-15.
(e) If there are any general obligation bonds of the public library
district (or other obligations incurred instead of general obligation
bonds under this Act) that are outstanding and unpaid at the time the territory
is transferred from the public library district under this Section, the
territory shall remain liable for its proportionate share of the bonded
indebtedness or other outstanding obligation incurred instead of bonded
indebtedness, and the public library district may continue to levy and extend
taxes upon the taxable property in the territory for the purpose of amortizing
the bonds or satisfying the other outstanding obligations until sufficient
funds to retire the bonds or to satisfy the other outstanding obligations have
been collected.
(e-5) The county clerk must extend taxes to pay the principal of and
interest
on any general obligation bonds issued to refund any bond described in
subsection (e), as provided in the bond ordinances on file in the office of the
county clerk, against all taxable property in the district, including taxable
property that was in the district on the date that the bonds being refunded
were issued; provided, however, that (i) the net interest rate on the refunding
bonds may not exceed the net interest rate on the refunded
bonds, (ii) the final maturity date of the refunding bonds may not extend
beyond the final maturity date of the refunded bonds, and (iii) the debt
service payable on the refunding bonds in any year may not exceed the debt
service that would have been payable on the refunded bonds in that year. This
subsection is
inoperative after December 31, 2000.
(f) The district secretary shall record a certified copy of the transfer
order with the recorder and file a certified copy with the county clerk of each
county affected.
(Source: P.A. 91-868, eff. 6-22-00.)
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(75 ILCS 16/15-95)
Sec. 15-95.
Inclusion of local governmental unit in district.
At any time
after the establishment of a district library, any county, municipality, or
township having its own public tax supported library and contiguous to the
district may become a part of the district if the proposition is submitted to
the voters of both the district and of the county, municipality, or township at
an election in accordance with the Election Code and the proposition is
approved by a majority of the voters of the district and of the county,
municipality, or township voting upon the proposition. The annexation
procedures in this Act shall govern the election for inclusion within an
existing district.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/Art. 20 heading) ARTICLE 20.
MERGERS OF DISTRICTS
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(75 ILCS 16/20-5)
Sec. 20-5.
Mergers authorized.
Mergers of 2 or more districts contiguous to
each other may be accomplished as provided in this Article.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/20-10)
Sec. 20-10.
Ordinance for merger; notice of intent.
(a) The board of trustees of a district
wishing to merge with a contiguous district having the same limitations
upon the annual library taxes that may be levied shall publish notice of its
intent to adopt an ordinance for merger with the contiguous
district. The notice shall be published in accordance with Section
1-30 in the proposed district and in the county that contains all or the larger
portion of the proposed district. The notice shall state the time, date, and
place of the meeting at which the ordinance is to be voted upon.
(b) On the date specified in the notice, the board of trustees may proceed
to enact the ordinance for merger. Enactment of the ordinance must be by a
two-thirds vote of the trustees serving on the board of each district. Ayes and
nays shall be recorded.
(c) The ordinances for merger enacted by each district need not be worded
exactly the same, but each ordinance must specifically state the intent to
merge.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/20-15)
Sec. 20-15.
Petition of residents; referendum.
(a) An election for a merger may be called upon the filing of petitions
signed by at least 100 of the voters residing in each of the districts.
The petitions shall specify the new maximum tax rate if the districts
proposed to be merged do not have the same limitations upon the annual
library taxes that may be levied. Separate but identical petitions shall
be filed with the secretary of each district affected. The specified
petitions shall be filled with the Secretaries of the respective districts
within 90 days of each other.
(b) The secretary of each district shall certify the question of merger to
the proper election authority, who shall submit the question to the respective
voters of each district affected at a regular election in accordance with
the Election Code. The proposition shall be in substantially the following
form:
Shall (name of public library district), (location), | ||
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If the petitions specified a new maximum tax rate, the ballot shall be
in substantially the following form:
"Shall The ....... Public Library District, of ....... Illinois, be merged with The ....... Public YES Library District, of ....... Illinois, with a maximum annual public library
tax rate for the merged districts established at ....% of the value of NO all taxable property as equalized and assessed by the Department of Revenue?"
(c) If a majority of the votes cast upon the question in each district
are in favor of the merger, the districts shall be merged. The election
authority of each district shall prepare a certificate of the results of
the election.
(d) A proposition for the merger of public library districts shall not be
submitted to the voters more often than once a year.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277 .)
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(75 ILCS 16/20-20)
Sec. 20-20.
Petition by districts after ordinance or referendum.
(a) Each district shall, upon enactment of a merger ordinance or upon
an election approving a merger, file an appropriate petition with the circuit
court of the county in which the majority of the merged territories lie.
The petition shall set forth the following:
(1) The merger ordinances or the certificate of the | ||
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(2) The establishment and history of the district.
(3) The lawful ceiling or limitation upon the annual | ||
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(4) The territory of the district and a map of the | ||
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(5) The bond issues outstanding, the amount of the | ||
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(b) The petition shall request a date for
a hearing on the petition and the name of the judge appointed to preside.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/20-25)
Sec. 20-25.
Hearing; court order for merger.
(a) The circuit court shall enter its order setting forth the date of the
hearing and naming the judge who will preside at the hearing. The trustees of
each district shall publish notice of the petition and the time, date, and
place of the hearing in accordance with Section 1-30 in the proposed district
and in the county that contains all or the larger portion of the proposed
district.
(b) At the hearing, all residents of the affected districts shall have a
reasonable opportunity to appear and present evidence regarding the lawful
ceiling, limitations upon, or duplications of the library tax levies then in
effect.
(c) The judge, upon hearing the petition and the evidence presented and
upon finding it sufficient, shall enter a final judgment doing the following:
(1) Approving the merger of the districts petitioning | ||
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(2) Naming the district.
(3) Appointing the incumbent trustees as trustees of | ||
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(4) Fixing the boundaries of the districts.
(5) Specifying the ceiling or limitation upon the | ||
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(6) Specifying the effective date of the merger to be | ||
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(7) Specifying that the district formed by the merger | ||
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(d) The trustees shall publish notice of the order and its effective
date in the same manner as for notice of a petition to the circuit court for
merger of the districts.
(e) The order shall be effective not later than 30 days after the date of
its entry.
(f) No further election need be held on the
question of merger under this Article.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/20-30)
Sec. 20-30.
Existing bond issue or special tax levy.
(a) An existing bond issue shall not be affected by a
merger of districts, but shall
continue in full force and effect, and a special tax supporting the
existing bond issue
shall continue to be levied upon the residents of the district originally
approving the bond issue.
(b) The merger shall not
affect the levy of any other special
tax under Article 35. The levy shall continue
in full force and effect, and the special taxes shall continue to be levied
upon the residents of the district originally authorizing the special
taxes.
(c) Residents
of the other district or districts involved in the merger shall not be
specially taxed in these instances unless the special taxes
are first approved
by the voters in the same manner as in the case of the original voter approval,
as provided in Article 35.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/Art. 25 heading) ARTICLE 25.
DISSOLUTION OF
DISTRICT
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(75 ILCS 16/25-5)
Sec. 25-5.
Dissolution authorized.
Dissolution of a district may be accomplished as provided in
this Article.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/25-10)
Sec. 25-10.
Petition for dissolution; court order.
(a) Voters representing 25% of a district's population, but
not less than 100 of the voters of a district, may petition
the circuit court of the county that contains all or a greater portion
of the district than any other county having territory in the district to order
the question of dissolution to be submitted to the voters of the district.
(b) The judge assigned to the matter shall enter an order setting forth
provisions similar to those required for an establishment referendum
and the regular election at which the referendum
for dissolution shall be held.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/25-15)
Sec. 25-15.
Form of proposition at referendum.
The proposition shall be in substantially the following form:
Shall (name of public library district), (location), | ||
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(Source: P.A. 87-1277 .)
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(75 ILCS 16/25-20)
Sec. 25-20.
Election results; court order.
(a) The majority of the votes cast upon the proposition shall determine the
matter.
(b) The judge assigned to the matter shall enter a judgment
setting forth the results of the referendum, and the judgment shall be
filed in the court. Where more than one county is involved in
the referendum, a copy of the original petition, the original order
calling for the referendum, and the judgment setting forth the
results shall be filed in the circuit court of
each county affected or involved.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/25-25)
Sec. 25-25.
Board action to dissolve district and wind up affairs.
(a) Upon the approval of dissolution under this Article
and the entry of the judgment of the circuit court, the board shall proceed
with dissolution of the district in
compliance with the judgment of the circuit court.
(b) The board shall continue in existence for the sole purpose of winding
up its affairs and for disposition of district property. Trustees whose
terms expire shall continue to serve until the board dissolves.
(c) Personal
property of intrinsic value only to libraries may be donated to other
public libraries. All other property, real or personal, shall be sold
under Section 30-70; the proceeds shall
be applied first to
the debts of the district, and the balance, if any, shall be paid to the county
collector. Where a district lies in more than one
county, the
proceeds shall be equitably apportioned among the various counties
affected, upon a ratio based upon the taxable property of the district
within each county.
The county collectors shall credit those amounts on their books as a
payment on behalf of the taxpayers of the dissolved district toward any
other taxes levied by the county involved, and the proceeds shall accrue to each county and shall abate the
county tax levy for each county affected as to
each taxpayer involved until the credit is used up or utilized and applied.
(d) The board shall then meet, prepare and file its final
report,
enact a dissolution ordinance, and direct the filing of certified copies
of the ordinance with the county clerk of each county
affected and the Illinois
State Librarian. The board shall then dissolve.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/25-30)
Sec. 25-30.
Limitation on referendum.
A proposition for dissolution of a district may not be submitted
to the voters of the district oftener than once every 5 years.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/Art. 30 heading) ARTICLE 30.
TRUSTEES
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(75 ILCS 16/30-5)
Sec. 30-5.
Initial appointment of trustees; first election.
(a) Within 60 days after the establishment of a library district,
and if the district is wholly contained within a single county, the presiding
officer of the county board, with the advice and consent of the county board,
shall appoint the first board of the district from a list
of nominees submitted
by the petitioners or persons appearing at the hearing. If, however, the
district lies in more than one county,
the presiding officer of the county board of each county in which the
district lies, with the advice and consent of the county board, shall appoint
at least one trustee; the remaining appointments, if any,
shall be made in each of the counties
in the district in proportion to the population of the district.
(b) The
trustees appointed under subsection (a) shall
serve until their successors have been elected and qualified at the first
election.
(c) The first election shall be held at the regular election
scheduled for trustees of public library districts under the Election
Code that occurs more than 4 months following the
establishment election
of the district.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-10)
Sec. 30-10. Election and terms of trustees.
(a) Trustees shall be elected every 2
years at
the regular election scheduled for trustees of public library districts
under the Election Code for 6-year
terms. Seven trustees shall constitute a board.
(b) The trustees' terms shall be staggered.
After the first election, the trustees shall determine, by lot, 2
trustees to serve for terms of 2 years, 2 trustees to serve for
terms of 4 years, and 3 trustees to serve for terms of 6 years. The terms
of all trustees shall begin on the third Monday
of the month next following the month of the election.
(c) At each election of trustees after the first election, the trustees
elected to succeed those
whose terms have expired shall hold office for the full
term of 6 years from the third Monday of the month next following
the election and until their respective successors are elected and qualified.
(d) A district may provide by resolution of the board that the term of
its trustees shall be 4 years. If the board adopts such a resolution, then
if 3 trustees are to be elected at the next election or if 2 trustees are
to be elected at each of the next 2 elections, one of the trustees elected
at the next election (to be determined by lot at the
first meeting after
that election) shall serve a 2 year term.
(Source: P.A. 93-847, eff. 7-30-04.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-20)
Sec. 30-20. Nomination of candidates; ballot.
(a) Nomination of candidates for election as trustees shall be by
petition, signed by a number of qualified voters equivalent to at least
2% of the votes cast at the last election for library trustees, or 50,
whichever is less, residing within the district,
and
filed with the secretary of the district within the time provided by the
Election Code. No party name or affiliation may
appear on the petition.
(b) The names of all candidates for the office of
trustee shall be certified by the secretary to the proper election
authority, who shall conduct the election in accordance
with the Election Code.
(c) The ballot for election of trustees shall not
designate any political party, platform, or political principle. (d) A person is not eligible to serve as a library trustee unless he or she is a qualified elector of the library district and has resided in the library district at least one year at the time he or she files nomination papers or a declaration of intent to become a write-in candidate or is presented for appointment. (e) A person is not eligible to serve as a library trustee who, at the time of his or her appointment or filing of nomination papers or a declaration of intent to become a write-in candidate, is in arrears in the payment of a tax or other indebtedness due to the library district or has been convicted in any court in the United States of any infamous crime, bribery, perjury, or other felony. (f) The changes made by this amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly apply only to candidates by petition or write-in candidates in the consolidated election of 2019 and thereafter and to all appointees appointed after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly.
(Source: P.A. 100-746, eff. 8-10-18.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-25)
Sec. 30-25. Vacancies.
(a) Vacancies shall be
declared in the office of trustee by the board
when an elected or appointed trustee (i) declines,
fails, or is unable to serve, (ii)
becomes a nonresident of the district, (iii) is convicted of a
misdemeanor by failing, neglecting, or refusing to discharge any duty
imposed upon him or her by this Act, or (iv) has
failed to pay the library taxes levied by the
district. Absence without cause from all regular board meetings for a
period of one year shall be a basis for declaring a vacancy.
(b) All vacancies
shall be filled by appointment by the remaining trustees until the next
regular library election, at which time a trustee shall be elected
for the remainder of the unexpired term. If, however, the vacancy occurs
with less than 28 months remaining in the term, and if the vacancy occurs
less than 88 days before the next regular scheduled election for this
office, then the person so appointed shall serve the remainder of the
unexpired term and no election to fill the vacancy shall be held. If the
vacancy is in the office of a trustee of a library district with an
appointed board, the vacancy shall be filled by appointment by the remaining
trustees. Vacancies shall be filled within 90 days after a vacancy has been declared. If the trustees fail to appoint a new member within 90 days after a vacancy has been declared, the State Librarian shall appoint an individual to fill the vacancy within 60 days after the trustees have failed to fill the vacancy. If the State Librarian fails to fill the vacancy within the 60 days after the trustees have failed to fill the vacancy, the vacancy shall be filled at the next regularly scheduled election. Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, if a vacancy occurred prior to May 27, 2022 and that vacancy has not been filled by the trustees before the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, the State Librarian shall fill the vacancy within 60 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly.
(Source: P.A. 102-977, eff. 5-27-22; 102-1107, eff. 12-14-22.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-30)
Sec. 30-30.
Compensation of trustees.
Trustees shall serve without compensation but shall be reimbursed
from district funds for their actual and necessary expenses incurred in
the performance of
their duties.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-35)
Sec. 30-35.
Board name; status; headquarters.
(a) The board of trustees of each district shall be a body politic
and corporate, by the name of "The Board of Library Trustees of the ....
Public Library District, ...., Illinois", and in that name may enact
ordinances and hold title to property, may sue and be sued in all courts
and places where judicial proceedings are had, and may take any action
authorized by law.
(b) At any time after the establishment of a district, the board of the
district
may enact an ordinance changing the district's name in the form given in
this Section. The change of name shall be
effective with the beginning
of the next ensuing fiscal year following the date of the ordinance's
enactment.
All assets, liabilities, and other obligations of the district under its
former name and all ordinances and other official acts of the district under
its former name shall automatically become those of the district under its
new name. The board of the district shall file a certified copy of the
ordinance
changing the district's name with the recorder of deeds, the county clerk,
and the county treasurer of each county in which the district in whole or
in part is located.
(c) The board shall establish an official mailing address to be used
for all notices.
(Source: P.A. 89-188, eff. 7-19-95.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-40)
Sec. 30-40. Organization of board; qualification
and oath of trustees. (a) Within 74 days after their election or appointment, the incumbent
and new trustees shall take their oath of office as prescribed by law
and meet to organize
the board.
(b) The first action taken at the meeting shall be the election
of a president, a vice-president, a secretary, and a
treasurer from among the trustees.
The secretary shall then record the membership of the
board. The board may, instead of electing a treasurer from among the trustees, by majority vote of the board, appoint and fix the compensation of a qualified treasurer that is not a trustee of the board.
(c) Trustees
duly elected or appointed as certified by the appropriate election
authority or appointing authority shall be qualified to serve as trustees under this Act. The required oath shall be taken and subscribed
before a notary public or the secretary of the board.
(d) Within 60 days after the organization of the board, the secretary shall file, with the county
clerk of the county containing all or a larger portion of the district
and with the Illinois State Librarian, a statement listing the names and addresses
of the trustees and officers and their respective terms in office.
The secretary shall report a vacancy on the board to the county clerk and
the State Librarian within 60 days after it occurs and shall report the
filling of a vacancy within 60 days after it is filled.
(e) The first officers shall serve until the next regular election
of trustees. Thereafter, officers shall serve for terms set by ordinance
but not to exceed 2 years, ending on the
third Monday of the month
following each regular election or until their successors are duly elected
by the board. A vacancy in any office shall be filled for the
unexpired term under Section 30-25.
(Source: P.A. 102-977, eff. 5-27-22; 102-1107, eff. 12-14-22.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-45) Sec. 30-45. Duties of officers. (a) The duties of the officers of the board are as provided in this Section. (b) The president shall preside over all meetings, appoint members of committees authorized by the district's regulations, and perform other duties specified by the district's regulations, ordinances, or other appropriate action. In the president's absence, the vice president shall preside at meetings. The president shall not have or exercise veto powers. (c) The vice president's duties shall be prescribed by regulations. (d) The treasurer shall keep and maintain accounts and records of the district during the treasurer's term in office, indicating in those accounts and records a record of all receipts, disbursements, and balances in any funds. Annual audit and financial report requirements shall conform with Section 3 of the Governmental Account Audit Act. (e) The treasurer shall give bond to the district to faithfully discharge the duties of the office and to account to the district for all district funds coming into the treasurer's hands. The bond shall be in an amount and with sureties approved by the board. The amount of the bond shall be based upon a minimum of 10% of the total funds received by the district in the last previous fiscal year. The cost of any surety bond shall be borne by the district. As an alternative to a personal bond on the treasurer, the treasurer may secure for the district an insurance policy or other insurance instrument that provides the district with coverage for negligent or intentional acts by district officials and employees that could result in the loss of district funds. The coverage shall be in an amount at least equal to 10% of the average amount of the district's operating fund from the prior 3 fiscal years. The coverage shall be placed with an insurer approved by the board. The cost of any such coverage shall be borne by the district. The system shall provide the Illinois State Library a copy of the district's certificate of insurance at the time the district's annual report is filed. (f) Any person, entity, or public body or agency possessing district funds, property, or records shall, upon demand by any trustee, transfer and release the funds, property, or records to the treasurer. (g) The secretary shall keep and maintain appropriate records for his or her term in office and shall include in those records a record of the minutes of all meetings, the names of those in attendance, the ordinances enacted, the resolutions and regulations adopted, and all other pertinent written matter affecting the operation of the district. The secretary may administer oaths and affirmations for the purposes of this Act. (Source: P.A. 103-592, eff. 6-7-24.) |
(75 ILCS 16/30-50)
Sec. 30-50.
Board meetings; quorum; voting.
(a) The board shall call not fewer than
5 regular meetings
each fiscal year. Each year, the board by ordinance
shall specify the time, place,
and date of the regular meetings. Special meetings may be
called by the president or the
secretary or by any 4 trustees. All meetings shall comply with the
Open Meetings Act.
(b) A quorum shall consist of 4 trustees. A majority of
those present shall
determine the vote taken on any question, unless a larger majority is specified
in this Act.
(c) All votes on any question shall be by ayes and nays and recorded by the
secretary. Absentees and abstentions from voting shall be noted but
shall not be counted for or against the question being voted on.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-52)
Sec. 30-52.
Trustee's failure or neglect to discharge
duty; penalty. Any trustee who, while acting as a
trustee or as an officer,
fails or neglects to discharge any duty imposed upon him or her by this Act is
guilty of a petty offense and shall be fined not less than $25 nor more
than $100 for each offense.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55)
Sec. 30-55.
Powers of trustees.
The board of trustees of a district shall
carry out the spirit and intent of this Act in
establishing, supporting, and maintaining a public library or libraries
within the district and for providing library service. In
addition, and without limiting other powers conferred by this Act, the board
shall have the powers set forth in the following Sections preceding Section
30-60.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.5)
Sec. 30-55.5.
Ordinances, regulations, and resolutions.
The board may enact, amend, and rescind
ordinances and may make and adopt regulations and resolutions for their own guidance and for the government
of the library that are expedient and not
inconsistent with this Act.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.10)
Sec. 30-55.10.
Expenditure of moneys.
The board shall have the exclusive control of
the expenditure of all moneys
collected for the library and deposited to the credit of the appropriate
funds.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.12)
Sec. 30-55.12.
Purchases.
Purchases made under this Act shall be made in
compliance with the Local Government Prompt Payment Act.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.15)
Sec. 30-55.15.
Supervision of facilities.
The board shall have exclusive control of the
construction of any library
building and of the supervision, care, and custody of the grounds, rooms or
buildings constructed, leased, or set apart for that purpose.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.20)
Sec. 30-55.20.
Purchase or lease of property; construction of buildings.
(a) The board may purchase or lease real or
personal property and may construct an
appropriate building or buildings for the use of the library or libraries
established under this Act, using, at the board's option,
contracts providing
for all or part of the consideration to be paid through installments at
stated intervals during a certain period not to exceed 20 years, with
interest on the unpaid balance at any lawful rate for municipal corporations
in this State.
(b) The board may refund at any time any
installment contract entered
into under this Section by means
of a refunding loan agreement. The refunding loan agreement may provide for installment payments of
principal and interest to be made at stated intervals during a certain
period not to exceed 20 years from the date of the refunding loan
agreement, with interest on the unpaid principal balance at any lawful
rate for municipal corporations in this State. No
installment contract or refunding loan agreement for the same property
or construction project may exceed an aggregate of 20 years.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.25)
Sec. 30-55.25.
Remodeling or reconstructing a building.
The board may remodel or reconstruct a
building erected, purchased,
or leased by the board when the building needs
remodeling or reconstructing or is
not adapted to the board's purposes and needs.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.30)
Sec. 30-55.30.
Disposal of property.
The board may sell or otherwise dispose of
real or personal property that it
deems no longer necessary or useful for library purposes under terms the board
deems best, but in no event on contracts extending over a period
of more than 20 years. The board may lease to others any
real property not immediately
useful to the district but for which plans for ultimate use have been adopted.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.32)
Sec. 30-55.32.
Sale or disposition of property.
(a) When the board has determined to sell or otherwise dispose of
real or personal property that it deems no longer necessary or useful for
library purposes, the property may be sold or disposed of at a
public sale as follows:
(1) Personal property of any value may be donated or | ||
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(2) Personal property having a unit value of $1,000 | ||
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(3) Personal property having a unit value of more | ||
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(4) In all other cases, except as provided in | ||
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(5) On the day of the sale, the board shall proceed | ||
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(b) If the board has determined that any building or buildings that were
received from a municipality due to the conversion of a tax supported
public library to a public library district under this Act or a prior
law are no longer
necessary or useful for library purposes, the board by resolution may
authorize the sale of the building or buildings and the underlying land to
the municipality from which they were received. The value of the property
shall be determined by a written MAI certified appraisal that shall be
available for public inspection. The resolution shall be published at the
first opportunity following passage in a newspaper published in the
municipality or, if there is none, in a newspaper published in the county
in which the municipality lies and that has general circulation in the
municipality. The board may accept any contract proposal for the sale of
the property to the municipality determined by them to be in the best
interest of the district by a vote of three-fourths of the board members
then holding office, but in no event at a price less than 80% of the
appraised value.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.35)
Sec. 30-55.35.
Administrator; legal counsel; consultants.
(a) The board may appoint and fix the
compensation of a qualified
librarian to act as administrator of the district's daily operations.
The administrator may hire other employees
deemed necessary by the administrator, fix
their compensation, and remove those employees, subject to the approval of the board.
(b) The board may
also retain legal counsel and professional consultants as needed.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.40)
Sec. 30-55.40.
Contracts for library services and other matters.
The board may contract with any public or
private corporation or entity for
the purpose of providing or receiving library service or of performing other acts necessary and proper to carry out the responsibilities,
the intent, and the provisions of this Act. This contractual power
includes, but is not limited to, (i) participating in interstate library
compacts and library systems, (ii) contracting to supply library services, and
(iii) spending any federal or State funds made
available to any county,
municipality, or township or to the State of Illinois for library
purposes. If, however, a contract is for the supply of library
services for residents without a public library established under this Act, the terms of that contract shall recognize the
principle of equity of cost of services to non-residents expressed in this
Section and shall provide for the
assumption, by the contracting
party receiving the services, of financial responsibility for the loss of or
damage to any library materials provided to non-residents under the contract.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.45)
Sec. 30-55.45.
Common library or services.
The board may join with the board or boards
of one or more public libraries
within this State in maintaining libraries or for the maintenance of a
common library or common library services for the participants upon
terms and conditions agreed upon by the participating
library boards.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.50)
Sec. 30-55.50.
Title to property.
The board may enter into contracts and
may take title to any property acquired
by it for library purposes.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.55)
Sec. 30-55.55.
Exclusion of certain persons from library.
The board may exclude from the use of the
library any person who willfully
violates an ordinance or regulation prescribed by the board.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.60)
Sec. 30-55.60. Use of library by nonresidents. The board may extend the privileges and use
of the library, including the
borrowing of materials on an individual basis by persons
residing outside the district. If the board exercises this power,
the privilege of library use shall be upon terms and conditions
prescribed by the
board in its regulations. The board shall charge a
nonresident
fee for the privileges and use of the library at least equal to the
cost paid by residents of the district, with the
cost to be determined according to the formula established by the Illinois
State Library.
A person residing outside of a public library service area must apply for a
non-resident library
card at the public library closest to the person's principal residence.
The nonresident cards shall allow for borrowing privileges
at all participating public libraries in the regional library system. The nonresident fee shall
not
apply to
any of the following:
(1) Privileges and use provided (i) under the terms | ||
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(2) Residents of an area in which the library is | ||
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(3) A nonresident who, as an individual or as a | ||
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(4) A nonresident in an unincorporated area in | ||
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The board may adopt regulations waiving the nonresident fee for persons under the age of 18. (Source: P.A. 101-632, eff. 6-5-20; 102-843, eff. 5-13-22.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.65)
Sec. 30-55.65.
Encouraging additions to district.
The board may undertake programs to
encourage the addition
to the district of adjacent areas without local tax supported library service
and may spend funds for this purpose.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.70)
Sec. 30-55.70.
Fines and penalties.
The board may provide, by ordinance,
fines and penalties (i) for injury to any
book or other library material or to any real or personal property belonging
to or in the custody of the library and (ii) for failure to return any book or
other material or personal property belonging to or in the custody of the
library.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.75)
Sec. 30-55.75.
Investment of funds.
The board shall invest funds pursuant to
the Public Funds Investment Act.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.80)
Sec. 30-55.80.
Eminent domain.
The board may exercise the power of eminent domain.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.82) Sec. 30-55.82. Eminent domain. Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, any power granted under this Act to acquire property by condemnation or eminent domain is subject to, and shall be exercised in accordance with, the Eminent Domain Act.
(Source: P.A. 94-1055, eff. 1-1-07.) |
(75 ILCS 16/30-55.85)
Sec. 30-55.85.
Reserve funds for self-insurance.
The board may accumulate and set apart as
reserve funds portions of
the unexpended balances of the proceeds received from taxes or
other sources, for the purpose of providing self-insurance against
liabilities of the district.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.90)
Sec. 30-55.90.
Joining associations.
The board may join
the district and its employees or trustees as a member or members
of the Illinois Library Association and the
American Library Association or any nonprofit, nonpolitical, Section
501(c)(3)
associations, as designated by the federal Internal Revenue Service, having
the purpose of improving library development and librarianship. The
board may provide for the payment of membership dues, fees, and
assessments to the associations.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-55.100)
Sec. 30-55.100.
Historical museum or library.
The board may participate in maintaining a historical museum or
library located in the district.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-60)
Sec. 30-60.
Resolution concerning library materials and
facilities. The board of each district
shall adopt,
and review at least every 2 years, a resolution for the selection of library
materials and the use of library materials and facilities. No employee
may be disciplined or dismissed for the selection of library materials when
the selection is made in good faith and in accordance with the
resolution
required to be adopted under this Section.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-62) Sec. 30-62. Advisory referenda. By a vote of the majority of the members of the board, the board may authorize an advisory question directly related to the operation of the library to be placed on the ballot at the next regularly scheduled election in the district. The board shall certify the question to the proper election authority, which must submit the question at an election in accordance with the Election Code.
(Source: P.A. 100-462, eff. 8-25-17.) |
(75 ILCS 16/30-65)
Sec. 30-65.
Reports and audits.
(a) On or before September 1 of each year, the board shall prepare a written
report for the past fiscal year. The secretary shall file certified copies of
the report on or before the due date with the Illinois State Librarian and in
the library or libraries operated by the district, where the report shall be
available for public inspection. The report shall include the following:
(1) The audit of the secretary and the secretary's | ||
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(2) A statement as to any change in the limits and | ||
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(3) A statement as to property of any type acquired | ||
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(4) A statement as to the amount of accumulations and | ||
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(5) A statement as to any outstanding liabilities, | ||
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(6) Any other pertinent information requested by the | ||
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(b) Where dissolution of the district has been approved, the board shall
prepare a final report.
(c) The secretary's records shall be audited by 2 other trustees appointed
by the president. The audit shall be conducted each fiscal year and upon the
change of secretaries. The audit report shall be filed not later than
90 days following the completion of the fiscal year. The report shall certify
the accuracy and completeness of the secretary's records and shall list the
discrepancies, if any. The report of the audit of the secretary's records
shall be made a part of the secretary's records.
(d) The board shall take whatever action is deemed necessary to
cure the discrepancies reported to it by any audit committee.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277; 88-442; 88-670, eff. 12-2-94.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-75)
Sec. 30-75.
Donations of money or property.
Any
person or persons desiring to make donations of
money, personal property, or real estate for the benefit of a library
may vest title to the donation in the board of library trustees of the district
receiving the donation. The money or property shall be held and
controlled by the trustees when
accepted according to the terms of the deed, gift, legacy, or bequest of
the donation. The board
shall be held and considered
to be a special trustee of the donated property.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-85)
Sec. 30-85.
Budget and appropriation ordinance;
levy ordinance.
(a) The board shall, within the first quarter of each
fiscal
year and no later than the fourth Tuesday of September,
prepare and enact
a budget and appropriation ordinance pursuant to the provisions of the
Illinois Municipal Budget Law.
A certified copy of the ordinance shall be published once, and the
board shall then ascertain the total amount of the appropriation made
for all purposes permitted by this Act and the total amount of monies
necessary to be raised for the appropriation.
(b) By the first
Tuesday in December, after
publication of the appropriation ordinance, the board shall enact a levy
ordinance incorporating the appropriation ordinance by reference and
levying not more than the total amount of the
appropriation (taking into consideration monies to be raised from
other than tax sources) upon all property subject to taxation
within the district as that property is
assessed and equalized for State and county purposes for that year.
(c) The secretary shall file, on or before the last Tuesday in December, a
certified copy of the levy ordinance with the county clerk of each county
affected by the levy. Where more than one county is involved, the secretary
shall supply and certify under his or her signature and seal of the district
additional information required by each county clerk for
the clerk's
determination of the portion of the levy required to be levied in his
or her county.
(d) The county clerk shall ascertain the rate per cent that, upon the
full, fair cash value of all property subject to taxation within the
district, as that property is assessed or equalized by the Department of
Revenue, will produce a net amount of not less than the
total amount so directed to be levied and then add on for collection
loss and costs. The county clerk shall extend this tax in a separate
column upon the books of the collector of State and county taxes within
the district.
(e) The secretary shall also file, on or before the last Tuesday of
December, certified copies of the appropriation and levy ordinances
with the library or libraries operated by the district and shall make
copies
available to public inspection at all times.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-90)
Sec. 30-90.
Termination of appropriations.
(a) Notwithstanding any limitations imposed by law, all appropriations made
in the annual budget shall terminate with the close of the fiscal year provided
for, except that remaining balances, in amounts up to 20% of those
appropriations, shall be available until August 30 for the authorization of the
payment of obligations incurred before the close of the fiscal year and until
September 30 for payment of those obligations. All remaining balances shall
be available for transfer to be accumulated under this Act.
(b) Transfers from one appropriation of any amount specified for any object
and purpose, not affecting the total amount appropriated, may be made at any
meeting of the board by an ordinance enacted by a two-thirds vote of all the
trustees present and voting. By a like vote, the board may by ordinance
make appropriations in excess of those authorized by the budget in order to
meet an immediate and unforeseen emergency. After the adoption of the annual
budget and appropriation ordinance, no other and further appropriations (except
as specified in this Section or pursuant to the financial provisions of the
Illinois Municipal Budget Law) shall be made at any other time during the
fiscal year.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-95)
Sec. 30-95. Working cash fund.
(a) A board may, by ordinance, create and maintain a
working cash fund, for the sole purpose of enabling the district to have
in its funds, at all times, sufficient money to meet demands for
ordinary and necessary and committed expenditures for library purposes.
(b) The working cash fund shall be known as the public library district
working cash fund and may contain any amount deemed necessary by the
board to satisfy the purpose of the fund. The balance in
the fund shall not, however, at any time be allowed to exceed 0.2% of the full,
fair cash value of all taxable property within the district, as
equalized or assessed by the Department of Revenue for the year 1998. The money for the fund shall accrue
from the public library district working cash fund tax the board is
authorized to levy under Section 35-35.
The board may appropriate
moneys to the working cash fund up to the maximum amount allowable in the
fund, and the working cash fund may receive those appropriations and any
other contributions.
(c) Once the fund has been created, the proceeds shall be deposited
into a
special and separate fund and may be carried over from year to year
without in any manner reducing or abating a future annual library tax
levy. The fund shall be identified in the budget each year, but shall not be
deemed a current asset available for library purposes.
(d) The proceeds of the fund may be transferred from the working cash
fund to the general library fund and disbursed from the general
library fund in
anticipation of the collection of taxes lawfully levied for general
library purposes or in anticipation of taxes imposed before or after the effective
date of this Act by the General Assembly of the
State of Illinois to replace revenue lost by units of local government
and school districts as a result of the abolition of ad valorem personal
property taxes pursuant to Article IX, Section 5, subsection
(c), of the Illinois Constitution. These taxes, when
collected and after payment
of tax warrants, shall be drawn upon to reimburse the working cash fund.
(e) Temporarily idle moneys in the working cash fund may be invested as directed by the governing board of the library district, and the interest earned on the investments may, at the option of the board, be either transferred permanently to the general corporate fund or may remain in the working cash fund. If the interest remains in the working cash fund, it may serve to increase the balance of the working cash fund available for loans, but in no event may the balance of that fund be allowed to exceed the statutory maximum for the fund established in this Section.
(Source: P.A. 95-659, eff. 10-11-07.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-100)
Sec. 30-100. Abolition of working cash fund. The board may, by resolution,
abolish a working cash fund
established under Section 30-95 and direct
the transfer of any balance
in the fund, including any interest that has accrued, to the general library
fund at the close of the fiscal year. If the board abolishes a
working cash fund under this Section, it may be reestablished in the same manner as the fund was originally created under Section 35-35 of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 95-659, eff. 10-11-07.)
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(75 ILCS 16/30-105)
Sec. 30-105.
Tax warrants.
(a) When there is insufficient money in the general fund
to defray the
necessary expenses of the district, and the working cash fund has been
drawn upon and depleted, the board may cause warrants to be issued and
drawn against and in anticipation of any taxes levied for the payment of
the necessary expenses of the district, but only to the extent of 85% of
the total amount of tax levied. The warrants shall show upon their
face that they are payable in numerical order of their issuance solely
from the taxes when collected and shall be received by any county
collector of taxes in payment of the taxes against which they are
issued. The taxes shall be set apart and held for
payment of the
warrants.
(b) Every warrant shall bear interest payable only out of the taxes
against which it is drawn, at a rate not exceeding the interest rate established
by statute, from the
date of its issuance until paid, or until notice is given by
publication in a newspaper or otherwise that the money for its payment
is available and that the warrant will be paid on presentation. Warrants not
presented pursuant to the notice shall, after the due date, carry a
lower rate of interest as specified, but not less than 3% and for only
one year. After that 1-year term, the warrant
shall bear no interest.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/Art. 35 heading) ARTICLE 35.
TAXATION
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(75 ILCS 16/35-5)
Sec. 35-5.
Tax levy for establishment, maintenance, and support of
district library.
(a) When a district has been organized
and established under
this Act, the board, upon its formation and qualification of the
trustees to serve, may levy an annual public library tax for the
establishment, maintenance, and
support of a public library or libraries within the district or for
contracting for library service. The tax shall not
exceed 0.15% (or a greater amount
not to exceed 0.60% if the greater
amount was authorized by the referendum establishing the public library
district) of the value of all the taxable property within the
district, as equalized and assessed by the Department of Revenue. Any tax levied under
Section 35-35
shall be disregarded in applying the provisions of this Section.
(b) The board may also levy an
additional tax of 0.02% of
the value of all the taxable property in the district, as equalized or
assessed by the Department of Revenue, for the purchase
of sites and buildings, the construction and equipment of buildings, the rental of buildings required for library purposes, and
maintenance, repairs, and alterations of library buildings and equipment.
In any year in which the board proposes to levy the
additional 0.02% tax, the board
shall adopt an ordinance
determining to levy the tax. The ordinance may be vacated
by the board before its publication.
Within 15 days after the adoption of the
ordinance, it shall be published in accordance with
Section 1-30. The publication or posting of the resolution
shall include a notice of (i) the specific number of voters required to
sign a petition requesting that the question of the adoption of the resolution
be submitted to the electors of the district, (ii) the time in which the
petition must be filed, and (iii) the date of the
prospective referendum.
The secretary of the district shall provide a petition form to any individual
requesting one.
If no petition is filed with the board within 30 days after publication or posting of the
ordinance, the district shall then be authorized to levy the tax. If, however, within the 30 day period a petition is filed with the
board, signed by electors of the district equal in
number to 10% or more of the total number of registered voters in the
district, asking that the question of levying a 0.02% tax be submitted to the electors of the district, the
question shall be certified to the proper election authority, who shall
submit the question at an election in accordance with the Election
Code, unless the board vacates the ordinance within 7 days after the
petition is filed. The proposition shall be in substantially the
following form:
Shall the Board of Library Trustees of (name of | ||
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If a majority of votes cast upon the proposition are
in the affirmative, the board may levy the additional tax.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/35-10)
Sec. 35-10.
Increase in annual tax rate.
(a) The annual
public library tax may be increased to not
more than 0.60% if the voters of the
district determine and
approve the increase by a majority vote of those voting upon the
question at any regular election. The question shall be submitted by the
proper election authority
pursuant to an ordinance or pursuant to a petition served upon the secretary
and bearing not fewer than 100
signatures of voters residing within the district. The question
shall be in substantially the following form:
Shall the annual public library tax rate for (name of | ||
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(b) Voter approval of an increase under a prior law shall satisfy the
requirements of this Section.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/35-15)
Sec. 35-15.
Transferred territory; tax liability.
(a) When any territory has been transferred from a district
under this Act and the court order providing for the transfer also
sets forth a continuing liability to be paid and retired by property owners
of the transferred territory, the county collector of the county involved
shall debit upon his or her books the taxes to be paid and thereafter levied by
the district and extended against taxable property within the transferred
territory. The county clerk shall continue to extend district library taxes
upon the taxable property within transferred territory, and the county collector
shall continue to collect district library taxes upon the taxable property
within the transferred territory, until the excess liability has been
paid and retired.
(b) Until full and final payment of the liability, the
residents and property
owners of the transferred territory shall be entitled to full and free library
service from the district. Upon full and final payment
of the liability, the residents and property owners of the transferred
territory shall no longer be subject to any tax levies by the district,
nor shall they thereafter have any right, title, or interest in and to the
assets and tangible property of the district affected by the transfer.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/35-20)
Sec. 35-20.
Status of taxes; multiple counties; annexation.
(a) The library taxes provided for in this Act shall be in addition to
all other taxes or tax rates authorized to be levied by the district or
any other taxing authority lying wholly or partially within the district
and they shall not be a part of the taxes making up any rate prescribed
as a limitation on the amount of taxes the other taxing authority or
the district may levy or collect, except that no library district tax
for library purposes shall be levied within the district by any other
taxing authority.
(b) Where the corporate limits of any library district lie partly in 2 or
more counties, the board shall ascertain the total amount of all taxable
property lying within each county, as the property is assessed or
equalized by the Department of Revenue for the current
year, and shall certify the amount of taxable property in each county
within the library district to the county clerk of each county
affected. Each county clerk shall then ascertain the rate (expressed as a
percentage) that, upon the total valuation of all property subject to taxation
within that library district ascertained as provided in this Section,
will produce a net amount not less than the total amount directed to be
levied by the library district. The county clerk shall then certify the
rate under his or her signature and seal and shall
extend the library tax
to be levied upon the books of the collector of taxes for his or her county
against all taxable property in his or her county within the limits of
the
library district.
(c) Where the corporate limits of an existing library
district are expanded by an annexation, the added or annexed territory shall be subject to the
library taxes provided for in this Act to the same extent
as territory within the district before the annexation.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/35-25)
Sec. 35-25.
Levy, collection, and deposit of taxes.
(a) The library taxes provided for in this Act shall be levied by the
district and collected in the same manner as
other general taxes by the
county collector or collectors affected by the levy. The proceeds of all taxes collected for district purposes, and all other moneys belonging
to the district, shall be deposited with the treasurer of the district,
who shall keep them in separate funds as follows:
(1) The annual public library tax proceeds shall be | ||
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(2) The working cash fund tax proceeds shall be kept | ||
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(3) The annual restoration fund tax proceeds shall be | ||
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(4) All other tax proceeds shall be kept in special | ||
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The funds shall be kept in separate and interest bearing accounts in one
or more banks or savings and loan associations in which public funds may
be deposited or invested as provided by
law.
(b) The treasurer shall not make an expenditure from any fund except
upon a warrant certified to as correct by the district librarian and
approved by the board.
(c) The board may transfer moneys from the Library Fund to the Working
Cash Fund and from the Working Cash Fund to the Library Fund.
(d) No bank or savings and loan association shall receive public funds as
permitted by this Section unless it has complied with the requirements
established under Section 6 of the Public Funds
Investment Act.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/35-30)
Sec. 35-30.
Building restoration tax.
(a) If a library building is destroyed or seriously
impaired by storm, fire, or other casualty, the board, in order to rebuild
or restore that library building,
may levy an annual tax (to be called the Restoration Fund Tax) not
exceeding 0.08333% of the value, as equalized or
assessed by the Department of Revenue,
of all the taxable
property in the district and for not more than 10
successive fiscal years.
(b) No public library district may levy a
tax under this Section unless
(i) the board first adopts an ordinance authorizing the
levy of the tax and orders the ordinance
submitted to the voters of the
public library district at an
election and (ii) the ordinance is approved by a majority of
the voters voting upon the question in accordance with the Election Code.
This subsection does not apply to the tax authorized by
Section 35-35.
This
tax shall be levied and collected in the same manner as other general taxes
by the county collector or collectors of the county or counties
affected by the levy and shall not be included
in the aggregate amount of taxes limited by any provision of this Act.
(c) The board shall not levy a tax
under this Section that would produce revenues greater
than
the difference between the actual cost of rebuilding or restoring the building
and
the total amount of any insurance benefits paid to the district as a result of the destruction or impairment of the library
building.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/35-35)
Sec. 35-35.
Working cash fund tax.
(a) For the purpose of providing money to establish and
replenish a library district working cash fund authorized by Section 30-95, the
board may levy an annual tax not to exceed
0.05% of the value, as equalized or assessed by the Department of Revenue
for the year in which each levy is made, of all
taxable property in the district. The tax shall be levied and collected
in the same manner as other general taxes by the
county collector or
collectors of the counties affected by the levy, but the collection
of the tax shall not
be anticipated by the issuance of any warrants drawn against the tax.
The tax shall be known as the public library district working cash fund
tax and shall be set apart in a special fund as prescribed in Sections
35-25 and 30-95.
(b) Whenever a tax is first levied under this Section, any taxpayer
in the district may, within 30 days after the levy is made, file with
the board a petition signed by the voters of the district equal in number
to 10% or more of the registered voters of the district requesting the
submission of the proposition to the voters of the district at an election in
accordance with the Election Code. The board shall certify the
proposition to the proper election authority, who shall submit the
proposition at an election in accordance with the Election
Code. If
a majority of the votes cast upon the proposition are in the
affirmative, the
tax shall thereafter be authorized; if a majority of the votes cast upon
the proposition are in the negative,
the tax shall not be levied.
(c) No public library district may levy a tax under this Section for more
than 4 years, but the 4 years for which a district elects to levy the tax need not be consecutive.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/35-40)
Sec. 35-40.
Fiscal year.
The first fiscal year
of any district shall close
on June 30
following establishment of the district. Thereafter, the
fiscal year of any
district shall commence on July 1 and close on June 30.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/Art. 40 heading) ARTICLE 40.
BUILDINGS, EQUIPMENT AND ACCUMULATIONS
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(75 ILCS 16/40-5)
Sec. 40-5.
Buildings and equipment.
(a) Whenever the board
determines or resolves to erect a building to
be used as a library, purchase a site for erecting such a
building, purchase a
building, repair, remodel, or improve an existing library building, build an addition to an existing library building,
furnish necessary equipment for a library building,
or acquire library materials (such as books, periodicals, films,
and recordings)
and electronic data storage and retrieval facilities in connection with
either the purchase or construction of a new library building or the expansion
of an existing library building, the trustees
shall proceed as follows:
(1) If a new building is to be erected or purchased | ||
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(2) The trustees may then determine the funds that | ||
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(3) The trustees shall further determine the maximum | ||
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(b) The secretary shall thereupon post notice of these proceedings and of
the meeting when the financing of the acquisition or other project shall be determined. The notice
shall specify the place where the plan and estimate are available for
public inspection.
(c) For the purpose of Sections 40-5 through 40-30, the acquisition
of library materials (such as books, periodicals, films, and recordings)
and electronic data storage and retrieval facilities is considered to be
in connection with the purchase or construction of a new library building
or the expansion of an existing library building if the determination of
the board of trustees to acquire the library materials is made within 5
years from the date that a new library building or the expansion of an existing
library building is completed.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277 .)
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(75 ILCS 16/40-10)
Sec. 40-10.
Bonds for buildings and equipment.
(a) If the board of trustees determines that funds for any or all of the
purposes authorized in Section 40-5 are to be provided by a bond issue, 30 days
after the posting of the notice required under Section 40-5, the board shall by
ordinance provide that the bonds of the district be issued for the payment of
the cost (estimated as provided in Section 40-5) of erecting or constructing a
building, remodeling, repairing, or improving an existing library building,
erecting an addition to an existing library building, or purchasing a building,
site, or equipment.
(b) The ordinance shall also state the time or times when the bonds and the
interest on the bonds shall become payable. The whole of the principal of the
bonds and the interest on the bonds shall, however, become payable within 20
years, and the interest on the bonds shall not exceed the rate permitted in the
Bond Authorization Act. The interest may be made payable at times (annually
or semiannually) prescribed by the ordinance.
(c) The ordinance shall be irrepealable by the board and shall
make provision for the levy and collection annually of a special tax upon
principal and interest of the bonds as they mature and collection loss and
costs. The tax shall be in addition to that otherwise authorized to be
levied and collected for library purposes.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/40-15)
Sec. 40-15.
Voter approval of bonds.
(a) Bonds shall not be
issued, nor the special tax imposed, until
the proposition to issue the bonds has been submitted to and approved
by a majority of the voters of the district voting upon the proposition
at a regular election
provided that notice of the bond referendum, if
held before July 1, 1999,
has been given in accordance with the provisions of Section
12-5
of the Election Code in effect at the time of the bond referendum, at least
10 and not more than 45 days before the date of
the election, notwithstanding the time for publication otherwise imposed by
Section 12-5.
Notices required in connection with the submission of public questions
on or after July 1, 1999 shall be as set forth in Section 12-5 of the Election
Code.
The board shall by ordinance
designate the election at which the proposition
is to be submitted and the amount of the bonds and their purpose.
The board shall certify the proposition to the proper election
authority,
who shall submit the proposition in accordance with the Election Code,
subject to the notice provisions set forth in this Section.
(b) The proposition to issue bonds shall be in substantially the following
form:
Shall the bonds of (name of public library district), | ||
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(c) When so authorized, the bonds shall be issued in the name of the
district, signed by the president and secretary, and countersigned by the
treasurer, with the seal of the district affixed.
(Source: P.A. 90-812, eff. 1-26-99; 91-57, eff. 6-30-99.)
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(75 ILCS 16/40-20)
Sec. 40-20.
Funds instead of bonds.
(a) If the board of trustees determines to provide funds for any or all of the
purposes authorized in Section 40-5 by
the annual certification and apportionment of costs (instead of issuing
bonds for that purpose), the board shall divide
the total cost of the plan into
as many parts as the trustees determine to spread the collection of that
amount
and shall by ordinance certify the amount of one of these parts each year
during the term over which the trustees have determined to spread the
collection. The ordinance shall be irrepealable by the Board.
(b) The board shall, in each succeeding annual appropriation ordinance,
include an amount certified under subsection (a) and shall, for
the amount so certified,
either include that amount in the annual library tax levy
or levy (in addition to the other library taxes for the district) a
special tax to pay that amount.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/40-25)
Sec. 40-25.
Mortgage on library building or site.
If the trustees deem it best, in order to provide and secure
the necessary money to do any or all of the things they are authorized
to do in this Article, they may, at
any time, borrow money and execute a
mortgage on a library building or site owned or being purchased or on a
library building being constructed for
the district for an amount not
exceeding 75% of the value of the building or site as
improved by the plan. The
money so obtained shall be used exclusively for purchasing a site
or a building, constructing a
building for library purposes, remodeling, repairing, or improving an existing library
building,
building an addition to an existing library building, erecting a new library building,
or purchasing necessary
equipment for the library, as provided in the plan. The trustees shall
determine and certify, by ordinance, the amount of the mortgage and the
amount of principal and interest to be retired each year for a specified
number of years. The board shall, in each succeeding annual
appropriation ordinance, include the amount so certified and shall, for
the amount so certified, include that amount in the annual library tax
levy or levy (in addition to the other library taxes for the
district) a special tax to pay that amount.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/40-30)
Sec. 40-30.
Special tax rate; referendum.
(a) No board or district may
levy the special tax
provided for in Section 40-20 or 40-25 unless the ordinance
authorizing the special tax is submitted to and approved by a majority
of the voters voting on the question at an
election.
(b) The special tax shall be levied at a
rate of not more than 0.0833% of the value of all
taxable property in the district, as equalized
and assessed by the Department of Revenue in any one
year, and shall be in addition to the tax otherwise authorized to be levied
and collected for library purposes. The special tax shall
not be levied for more
than the number of years into which the trustees have divided the cost
of the plan.
(c) Submission of the special tax levy to the voters of the
district shall be authorized by an
ordinance enacted by the board. The ordinance shall
designate the election at which
the proposition is to be submitted, the total
cost of the project,
the amount of the annual levy to be certified, and the number of years
the levy is to be made. The board shall certify the proposition to the
proper election authority, who shall submit the
proposition in accordance
with the Election Code.
(d) The proposition shall be substantially in
the following form:
Shall Ordinance No. (number of ordinance), dated | ||
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(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/40-35)
Sec. 40-35.
Filing of documents; levy and collection of
special tax.
(a) Upon the voters' approval of
a bond issue or a
special tax supporting an annual certification or a mortgage, the
secretary shall file certified copies of each ordinance, and of the
certificate of results of the canvass of the referendum on the question
of the bond issue or
on the question of the special tax for annual certification or the
mortgage, with the county clerk of each county affected by the ordinance
and election results. The
secretary shall also certify under his or her signature and the seal of the
district, and file with each county clerk, other information required by a county clerk to determine the total amount of taxes to
be extended, along with collection loss and costs, upon the taxable
property within his or her county.
(b) The special tax supporting a bond issue, and the special tax
supporting an annual certification or a mortgage, shall be levied,
extended, and collected each year, as in the case of other library taxes,
until the debt involved has been paid and retired. The special taxes
shall not be included separately or together in the aggregate of tax
levies otherwise limited by law and shall be in addition to other taxes
authorized by law. The special taxes shall not
affect any appropriation
made or to be made for the maintenance and support of the library or
libraries operated by the board.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/40-40)
Sec. 40-40.
Accumulation of funds.
(a) The board shall determine when it will proceed with constructing a
building, purchasing a site or building, remodeling, repairing, or improving an
existing library building, building an addition to an existing library
building, or purchasing necessary equipment. The board may proceed at once or
may determine to wait and allow funds to accumulate.
(b) If the board determines to let funds accumulate, it shall invest the
money as authorized by law until the money is needed for any or all of the
purposes authorized in Section 40-5.
(c) The board may contract to accomplish any or all of the purposes
enumerated in subsection (a) and shall apply the proceeds of any special tax as
collected and the funds accumulated toward payment for accomplishing those
purposes.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/40-45)
Sec. 40-45. Bids for construction, improvements, or equipment purchases.
(a) When the trustees determine to commence constructing the
building, purchasing a site or a building, remodeling,
repairing, or improving an existing library building, erecting
an addition to an existing library building, or
purchasing the necessary equipment for the
library, they may then revise the plan or adopt a new plan and
provide estimates of the costs of the revised or new plan.
(b) The board shall, when the cost is in
excess of $25,000, advertise for bids for constructing the building,
remodeling, repairing, or improving of an existing library building, erecting
an addition to an existing library building, or purchasing the necessary
equipment for the library and shall let the contract or contracts for the
project, when the cost is in excess of $25,000, to the lowest responsible
bidder or bidders. The board shall not be required to accept a bid that does not meet the library's established specifications, terms of delivery, quality, and serviceability requirements. Contracts which, by their nature, are not adapted to award by competitive bidding, are not subject to competitive bidding, including, but not limited to: (1) contracts for the services of individuals | ||
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(2) contracts for the printing of finance committee | ||
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(3) contracts for the printing or engraving of bonds, | ||
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(4) contracts for the maintenance or servicing of, | ||
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(5) purchases and contracts for the use, purchase, | ||
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(6) contracts for duplicating machines and supplies; (7) contracts for utility services such as water, | ||
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(8) contracts for goods or services procured from | ||
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(9) purchases of equipment previously owned by some | ||
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(10) contracts for goods or services which are | ||
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Contracts for emergency expenditures are also exempt from competitive bidding when the emergency expenditure is approved by 3/4 of the members of the board. The board shall require from the bidders security for
the performance of the bids determined by the board pursuant to law.
The trustees may let the contract or contracts to one or more bidders as
they determine.
(Source: P.A. 100-338, eff. 8-25-17.)
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(75 ILCS 16/40-50)
Sec. 40-50.
Special reserve fund; plan.
(a) The board may, by ordinance, establish a special reserve fund, for the
purpose of Section 40-5 or for emergency expenditures for the repair of an
existing library building or its equipment. The board may transfer to the
special reserve fund, each year, the unexpended balances of the proceeds
received annually from annual public library taxes not in excess of
statutory limits if (i) the board has resolved to develop and adopt
a plan or plans as authorized in this Article and (ii) the
board provides in the annual appropriation ordinance for accumulation of
those unexpended balances.
(b) The plan required in this Section shall be
developed in general form within 2 years
of the adoption of the ordinance establishing a special reserve fund; the
plan subsequently may be amended as circumstances may require.
(c) No plan is needed for the emergency expenditures from the special
reserve fund for the repair of an existing library building or its equipment.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/40-55)
Sec. 40-55.
Insurance Reserve Fund; transfers.
The board of the Byron
Public Library District
may,
within one year from the effective date of this Amendatory Act of the 93rd
General
Assembly, by proper resolution following
a
public
hearing
(that is preceded by at least one published notice occurring at least 7 days
prior to the
hearing in a newspaper of general circulation within the district and setting
forth the time,
date, place, and subject matter of the hearing), transfer money from the
Insurance Reserve Fund to the district's Expansion Special Reserve Fund,
provided that the amount transferred is
not then
required for the payment of any liabilities due to be paid from the Insurance
Reserve Fund.
(Source: P.A. 93-315, eff. 1-1-04.)
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(75 ILCS 16/Art. 45 heading) ARTICLE 45.
BONDS AND REFERENDA
UNDER REPEALED ACTS
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(75 ILCS 16/45-5)
Sec. 45-5.
Bonds and referenda under repealed Acts.
Repeal of "An Act in
relation to the creation of public library districts", approved May 16, 1957,
and repeal of the Illinois Public Library District Act shall not abrogate any
referendum held under either of those Acts, but the referendum shall be given
full effect as if conducted under this Act. Nor shall the repeal of those Acts
abrogate any bonds issued under either repealed law, but those bonds shall
continue to be deemed as a valid bond issue and legally binding upon the
district having sold the bonds, and the district may continue to levy the taxes
necessary and sufficient to pay the principal of and interest upon those bonds
under this Act.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/Art. 50 heading) ARTICLE 50.
CODIFICATION
PROVISIONS
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(75 ILCS 16/50-5)
Sec. 50-5.
Prior law.
(a) A provision of this Act that is the same or substantially the same
as a prior law shall be construed as a continuation of the prior law and
not as a new or different law.
(b) A citation in another Act to an Act or to a Section of an Act that is
continued in this Act shall be construed to be a citation to that continued
provision in this Act.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/50-10)
Sec. 50-10.
Other Acts of the 87th General Assembly.
If any other Act of the
87th General Assembly changes, adds, or repeals a provision of prior law that
is continued in this Act, then that change, addition, or repeal in the other
Act shall be construed together with this Act.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/50-15)
Sec. 50-15.
Home rule; mandates.
Nothing in this Act as initially
enacted (i) is a denial or limitation on home rule powers where no denial
or limitation existed under prior law or (ii) creates a State mandate under
the State Mandates Act where no mandate existed under prior law.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/50-20)
Sec. 50-20.
Repeal.
The following Act is repealed:
The Illinois Public Library District Act.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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(75 ILCS 16/Art. 55 heading) ARTICLE 55.
EFFECTIVE DATE
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(75 ILCS 16/55-5)
Sec. 55-5.
Effective date.
This Act takes effect upon becoming law.
(Source: P.A. 87-1277.)
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