Municipal conference
attendees spend more than $1K to learn tight budget techniques
Send a link to a friend
[October 29, 2014]
By Scott Reeder
CHICAGO – City officials from across
the state gathered last month at the annual Illinois Municipal
League Conference in Chicago to learn how to manage municipal
budgets during tough fiscal times — many kept a tight budget during
the conference and others spent upwards of $1,000 per person to send
a representative.
|
This is happening at time when the effective property tax rate for many suburban
cities has gone up by more than 80 percent over the last decade. And many
downstate communities are cutting back on core government services such as
police and fire protection.
Illinois News Network filed Freedom of Information Act requests with
municipalities across the state seeking copies of expense reports filed by
elected and administrative officials who attended the conference.
Every municipality has different rules regarding reimbursable expenses. Moline,
for instance, did not reimburse for alcohol — representatives subtracted the
cost of all alcohol purchased during meals — while Rock Island reimbursed the
whole tab.
Proximity appeared to be the largest factor in whether attendees stayed in the
Hilton at taxpayers’ expense rather than commuting. The cost per person, per
night for a main level room at the Chicago Hilton was $267.47 once taxes were
added and executive level rooms were $308.47 per night.
For a city like Rock Island, which sent two city council members and Mayor
Dennis Pauley, the bill for lodging alone came to more than $1,500.
When it came to parking, attendees had many choices, including the hotel’s
self-park or valet services, as well as many nearby discount parking garages.
Among those who drove instead of taking public transportation, attendees from
Mokena, Evanston, Orland Park, Rock Island, Berwyn, Alton and Moline all chose
to park in the hotel lot. Representatives from Berwyn, Moline and Mokena opted
for the more costly valet parking option.
[to top of second column] |
According to FOIA documents, no mileage reimbursements were
associated with conference attendance.
Not all cities saw the conference as a necessary expense.
“Due to budgetary cut backs any City elected officials or municipal
employees wanting to attend the 2014 Illinois Municipal League
Conference were to pay their own expenses. There would be no
reimbursements for attending said conference,” said Kris Schmitz, a
spokeswoman for the city of Kankakee.
Other communities took a similar view. For example, the city of East
Moline did not send anyone to the conference.
Others who attended the conference were quite cost conscious. For
example, the Village of Downers Grove sent three people to the
conference but each rode public transportation and didn’t bill the
city for meals.
The Village of Orland Park was equally thrifty, sending two
representatives who chose to self-park in the Hilton guest parking
lot instead of the hotel’s more expensive valet service. The village
also places caps on meal expenses.
— Editor Lesley Nickus contributed to this report
[This
article courtesy of
Watchdog.]
Click here to respond to the editor about this
article.
|