Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.14.20 PM

County Undertakes Formatting Overhaul of Decades-Old Ordinances

Spread the love

JOLIET — Will County officials are modernizing the format and structure of the county’s ordinances, some of which date back to 1943, as part of a comprehensive review process to improve readability and consistency.

During Thursday’s Ordinance Committee meeting, members and staff worked through detailed formatting changes to Chapter 30 of the county’s code, which governs administration, with attention to readability concerns that have persisted for decades.

“We do have two chapters for the full county board meeting coming up that we’re going to be approving,” said committee member Judy Ogala, who raised concerns about the document’s formatting. “When I’m looking at all this, and I’ve said this before, is when you are typing a paper for a master’s thesis, you have your heading and then all of the lines are indented. They don’t come back over, so it’s easy to read.”

Phil Mock from the State’s Attorney’s Office, who is leading the ordinance review project, offered to make several formatting improvements, including adding bold headings for committee names and creating consistent indentation patterns to make the ordinances more accessible.

“I could put more spacing to highlight it by having an extra space. So after the word, after the three, there’d be a double space before it got to ‘executive,’ and then at the end of ‘executive,’ a double space before ‘finance’ started,” Mock explained.

The committee also decided to eliminate the traditional section symbols (§§) that had appeared in front of section numbers, which Mock noted were redundant. “It’s self-explanatory,” he said, adding that the committee was also removing references to previous iterations of ordinances to streamline the documents.

Committee member Katie Freeman supported the changes but cautioned against making the document look “choppyish” by over-formatting. “When you look through it, all of the different times that some committees, you know, be it landfill committee, public health and safety committee, whatever committee, it’s going to jump out all over the place,” she said.

The committee ultimately decided to bold committee names at the beginning of each section and maintain consistent indentation throughout, with Mock agreeing to implement the changes for all chapters under review.

“I like it when Michael was a great public works — public health and safety — she would put things on that didn’t come and flow that way. She was in charge of that committee. I didn’t want to — I wanted her to make it her committee, and she did a great job,” Ogala said, emphasizing that the formatting should support committee chairs in understanding their responsibilities.

The comprehensive formatting review is part of a larger effort to modernize the county’s ordinances. Mock noted that some sections of the code hadn’t been properly reviewed since they were first written in the 1940s.

“The earliest I found was ’43,” Mock told the committee when discussing the age of some provisions.

The committee voted unanimously to forward the updated Chapter 30 to the executive committee with the agreed-upon formatting changes. The committee plans to continue its systematic review with Chapter 34 at its next meeting.

Events

No events

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Safety Upgrades Planned for Wilmington-Peotone Road; Gas Line Proposal Rejected

Public Works & Transportation Committee Meeting | December 2, 2025 Article Summary: The Will County Public Works Committee approved a $1.9 million engineering contract for improvements to a dangerous stretch...
Officials: Stockton stands together after fatal shooting

Officials: Stockton stands together after fatal shooting

By Madeline ShannonThe Center Square In the days after the deadly Nov. 29 shooting in Stockton, the Northern California community is trying to pull together, local representatives told The Center...
IL strips explicit racial criteria from minority teacher scholarship program

IL strips explicit racial criteria from minority teacher scholarship program

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square Rather than attempt to defend a longstanding state-funded scholarship program against claims in court that it intentionally discriminated against white applicants, the...
Illinois quick hits: Armed sex offender sentenced; most are family farms

Illinois quick hits: Armed sex offender sentenced; most are family farms

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Armed sex offender sentenced A Southern Illinois man has been sentenced to 35 years in prison after he admitted to distributing...
HHS: Pritzker 'eroded public trust' in public health

HHS: Pritzker ‘eroded public trust’ in public health

By Jim TalamontiThe Center Square A U.S. Department of Health and Human Services spokesman says Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker eroded public trust and is trying to reinvent public health. The...
U.S. Supreme Court to decide birthright citizenship case

U.S. Supreme Court to decide birthright citizenship case

By Dan McCalebThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday agreed to decide a case challenging President Donald Trump's plan to end birthright citizenship. On the first day of...
WATCH: House passes bills to block CCP's influence on schools

WATCH: House passes bills to block CCP’s influence on schools

By Esther WickhamThe Center Square House representatives passed three bills this week aimed at protecting K-12 classrooms from the influence of the Chinese Communist Party. The bills - PROTECT Our...
New fiscal year begins with lowest border apprehensions in recorded history

New fiscal year begins with lowest border apprehensions in recorded history

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Illegal border crossings continued an historic downward trajectory in October and November, representing the lowest numbers ever reported at the beginning of a fiscal year...
IL legislator credits Trump for U.S. Steel announcement

IL legislator credits Trump for U.S. Steel announcement

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – An Illinois state legislator from the Metro East says it’s a Christmas miracle that U.S. Steel is...
Companies hit with hundreds of Lake County EtO lawsuits cry foul

Companies hit with hundreds of Lake County EtO lawsuits cry foul

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square A group of big medical device and chemical manufacturing companies are pushing back against attempts by trial lawyers to rope them into...
Debate over AI heats up as GOP scraps moratorium in annual Defense bill

Debate over AI heats up as GOP scraps moratorium in annual Defense bill

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Lawmakers are becoming increasingly concerned about the rapid expansion of AI technology and its impacts on cybersecurity, the power grid, and online safety. While the...
Evers vetoes 9 bills, including block on illlegal BadgerCare enrollment

Evers vetoes 9 bills, including block on illlegal BadgerCare enrollment

By Jon StyfThe Center Square Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers vetoed nine bills Friday, including a much-debated bill that would prevent tax money from going toward the health care of undocumented...
Bull Moose Project criticizes Sen. Lummis over stalled crypto legislation

Bull Moose Project criticizes Sen. Lummis over stalled crypto legislation

By Tom JoyceThe Center Square A conservative advocacy group is pressuring U.S. Sen. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., over her handling of a major digital asset bill, arguing that she slowed progress...
beecher illinois public library graphic.1

Beecher Library Board Approves $392,000 Tax Levy, Appoints Two New Trustees

Beecher Public Library District Meeting | October 2025 Article Summary: The Beecher Public Library District Board of Trustees appointed two new members to the board and established the property tax...

IL Sec of State criticizes TSA fee option, extends REAL ID facility lease

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias is criticizing the federal government’s plan to offer travelers without proper...