Board Updates Grocery Tax Ordinance per State Request
Village of Beecher Board Meeting | Dec. 8, 2025
Article Summary: To comply with requirements from the Illinois Department of Revenue, the Beecher Village Board amended its Municipal Grocery Retailers’ Occupation Tax ordinance. The change is a technical language adjustment to ensure the 1% tax is implemented correctly on January 1, 2026.
Grocery Tax Ordinance Key Points:
-
Ordinance Amended: Ordinance No. 1428 was updated to match statutory language required by the state.
-
Tax Rate: The ordinance confirms a 1% tax on the selling price of groceries.
-
Effective Date: The tax will be implemented on January 1, 2026.
-
Reasoning: The Illinois Department of Revenue requested specific wording changes regarding “sales of service” to process the tax collection.
The Beecher Village Board passed an amendment to its grocery tax ordinance on Monday, December 8, 2025. The vote updates Ordinance No. 1428, originally adopted in July 2025, which established a Municipal Grocery Retailers’ Occupation Tax.
Village Administrator Charity Mitchell explained that the amendment was necessary due to a request from the Illinois Department of Revenue. “They wanted a minor language change… something that they said we had to do,” Mitchell told the Board.
The amendment clarifies the language regarding the “Municipal Grocery Service Occupation Tax,” specifically imposing the tax on persons engaged in the business of making sales of service who transfer groceries as an incident to that sale. The rate remains fixed at 1%.
The ordinance must be filed with the Illinois Department of Revenue by January 1, 2026, to ensure effective implementation.
Latest News Stories
Budget math undercuts Bessent’s deficit reduction pledge
State Police, IDOT break ground on $14M training facility
Republican data privacy bill scrutinized in congressional hearing
World Cup: Economic impact equation includes displaced regular tourism
Illinois Quick Hits: Johnson says comptroller running is ‘no breaking news’
Trump targets 60 economies with forced labor tariffs
Lawmakers probe $1.2B Ohio Medicaid fraud
Debt burden, pensions burden Chicago Public Schools
Nearly 100,000 Illinois Uber, Lyft drivers may soon be able to unionize
Michigan lawmakers spar over Rx Kids program amid oversight concerns
GOP rep: New budget shows ‘addiction’ to taxes
Retirees face $5,500 average cut to annual Social Security benefits in 2032