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		 Who’s afraid of 
		consolidation? Written By: Austin Berg, INN ContributorApril 14, 2016
 
 Illinois has nearly 7,000 units of local 
		government. That’s the highest count of any state in the nation, and the 
		runner-up is not even close.
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            |  One of those units of government is the Naperville Township Road District, where 
seven employees maintain less than 20 miles of road at a cost of $116,000 per 
mile. City officials have said they could maintain the same distance at half the 
cost, and have moved to take over the road district’s duties on behalf of local 
taxpayers. 
 But the final decision on whether to outsource maintenance of those roads to the 
city rests with Naperville Township Road Commissioner Stan Wojtasiak, who has 
put local taxpayers on the hook for thousands of dollars in meals and treats, 
including alcohol, over the course of his tenure, according to the Naperville 
Sun. Wojtasiak said he spent the money to boost staff morale, and has yet to 
announce his decision regarding consolidation.
 
 The Naperville case is emblematic of a statewide problem in Illinois: Having 
thousands of local governments poses serious problems when it comes to oversight 
and efficiency.
 
 The result of the status quo? Illinois property taxes are the third-highest in 
the nation, according to the Tax Foundation, which also predicts Illinois will 
soon overtake New Jersey as the state with the highest property taxes. Many 
homeowners in Illinois are now paying twice for their houses over their 
lifetimes – once to the bank, and once to the government through property taxes.
 
 A look into the nature of local spending in Illinois reveals big opportunities 
for sorely needed property-tax savings through government consolidation, and 
also shows the high costs shouldered by Illinoisans due to decades of political 
inaction.
 But the drama over a few miles of Naperville pavement illustrates how the road 
to consolidation is often littered with obstacles.
 
 One bipartisan bill being considered in Springfield would help smooth the 
consolidation process for many local governments. House Bill 4501 would allow 
county boards to dissolve certain units of local government via ordinance, a 
power already enjoyed by DuPage County.
 
 While this is a step in the right direction, local governments will need more 
than the powers granted by HB 4501 to tackle major cost drivers to prevent 
property-tax bills from growing even higher.
 
 For example, prime candidates for consolidation are Illinois’ 859 local school 
districts, which consume nearly two-thirds of the $27 billion in local property 
taxes collected across the state each year. According to data from the Illinois 
State Board of Education, a quarter of Illinois school districts serve only a 
single school, a third serve fewer than 600 students, and more than 40 percent 
serve only one or two schools.
 
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			 Forthcoming research from the Illinois Policy Institute shows 
			that reducing the number of school districts by half could lead to 
			annual operating savings of $130 million to $170 million and could 
			conservatively save the state $3 billion to $4 billion in pension 
			costs over the next 30 years. In terms of the number of school 
			districts per student, the move would put Illinois between 
			California and Texas.
 Beyond consolidating small school districts, many larger communities 
			would be well-served by merging elementary school districts with 
			high school districts.
 
 The Homewood-Flossmoor area is home to two K-8 school districts and 
			a high school district, an inefficient setup mirrored across the 
			state. Instead of having a single “unit” school district that covers 
			all schools in the area, taxpayers shoulder the burden of three 
			separate administrative staffs, which contain duplicative and 
			overlapping positions.
 
 The base salaries of all three districts’ staffs cost 
			Homewood-Flossmoor-area taxpayers nearly $5 million a year. By 
			consolidating those three staffs into one, Homewood-Flossmoor could 
			save local taxpayers millions of dollars annually. Consolidating the 
			three superintendent positions into one would alone save $500,000 
			each year.
 
 Consolidation focused on cutting unnecessary costs from 
			school-district administration – and not on equalizing salary 
			contracts or funding new facilities, as has plagued similar efforts 
			in the past – is a fair and necessary step in communities across 
			Illinois.
 
 The same goes for road districts, mosquito-abatement districts, park 
			districts, library districts and more.
 
 But as long as state and local politicians fail to trim Illinois’ 
			glut of government units, taxpayers will continue to be crushed 
			under the weight of ever-higher costs. Transparency, accountability 
			and fiscal responsibility all depend on consolidation in Illinois.
 
 Austin Berg is a writer for the Illinois Policy Institute. He wrote 
			this column for the Illinois News Network, a project of the 
			Institute. Austin can be reached at 
			aberg@illinoispolicy.org.
 
            
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