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 The suburban village of Carol Stream is one of only a handful of Illinois 
communities that does not impose a local property tax. But that may change soon, 
thanks to the village’s rising pension costs. 
 Carol Stream levied a property tax only temporarily in the 1970s, but local 
officials say the village needs a new property tax to make up for declining 
local sales tax revenue, which has fallen 2.4% between 2017 and 2018, according 
to the Daily Herald. The village last raised its sales tax in 2018 to 8%, where 
it stands now.
 
 But sales tax revenue would need to increase by 1.9% to pay for rising pension 
costs. The village’s required police pension contribution will be $2.8 million 
for fiscal year 2021, a $224,850 increase from fiscal year 2020.
 
 
Those increased pension costs, coupled with the decline in sales tax revenue, 
are placing pressure on Carol Stream’s budget. At this rate, officials project, 
the village would run out of capital funds during the third year of a five-year 
infrastructure plan without new revenue. The village used to transfer surpluses 
from the general fund into the capital fund to finance those projects – but it 
hasn’t generated a surplus in two years. Carol Stream started charging drivers a 
local gas tax in 2018, which also funds road improvements.[to top of second column]
 The village estimates Carol Stream homeowners with a median property value of 
$231,400 would owe $61 annually in property taxes, according to the Herald. 
Residents across DuPage County – where Carol Stream is located – pay some of the 
highest property taxes in the nation.
 
 
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 Across the state, local communities are seeing 
			pension costs eat into spending on public services. Only 14% of 
			property tax dollars received by local police departments in DuPage 
			County went to public safety services in 2016 – the rest when to 
			police pensions.
 Carol Stream is not the only municipality searching for additional 
			revenue as pensions strain local budgets. In 2018, the southern 
			Illinois city of Carterville hiked its property tax levy by over 30% 
			– the largest in its history – while north suburban Highland Park 
			raised their levy by nearly $1 million to pay for pensions.
 
 Illinois spends nearly double the national average on pensions, 
			measured as a percentage of all state and local government spending 
			– more than any other state in the nation. Without meaningful 
			reform, local governments in Illinois will continue to ask taxpayers 
			to foot the bill for rising pension costs.
 
 Lawmakers must amend the constitution to address this problem, and 
			to protect taxpayers as well as the retirement security of those 
			enrolled in the pension systems.
 
 Carol Stream will host a forum Sept. 30 for residents to ask 
			questions about the property tax proposal.
 
            
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