Meeting Summary and Briefs: Village of Beecher Board of Trustees for March 23, 2026
Village of Beecher Board of Trustees Meeting | March 23, 2026
The Village of Beecher Board of Trustees met on Monday, March 23, 2026, tackling a heavy agenda dominated by infrastructure spending and community event planning. In addition to authorizing over $1 million for the Miller Street water main replacement and donating $10,000 for emergency fence repairs at Firemen’s Park, the board paid its routine bills totaling $53,951.07 and reviewed village finances, which sit at a combined $5,648,768.87 across all accounts. The board also discussed an upcoming festival, failing village hall windows, and routine mosquito abatement measures.
Inaugural Wine and Cheese Festival Approved for Firemen’s Park:
The board gave unanimous consensus to allow a local resident to host a new Wine and Cheese Festival at Firemen’s Park on April 11. The event was originally slated to take place in unincorporated Will County last year but was canceled due to difficulties securing a county liquor permit. The organizer has arranged to utilize a special event permit through Phil’s, a local business. Because the festival is expected to draw over 200 attendees—with organizers claiming some guests may travel from overseas—village park rules required formal board consensus. The event organizer is privately funding porta-potties and paying for a Beecher police officer to provide on-site security.
Village Prepares to Replace Original 1985 Village Hall Windows:
The board held a preliminary discussion regarding the severe deterioration of the windows at Village Hall. Trustee Brian Diachenko noted that the building’s approximately 13 windows, which are original to the circa-1985 structure, have completely failed. The gas seals between the panes have broken down, leaving the glass permanently dirty and distorted. Officials warned that securing high-quality commercial replacements will be a “substantial” expense, but the village plans to seek bids to determine exact pricing and whether the project should be tackled this year or pushed to the next fiscal budget.
Spring Mosquito Control Supplies Purchased:
Preparing for the warm weather, the board unanimously approved two standard purchases to supply the public works department’s mosquito abatement program. The board approved a $5,578 purchase from Mug-A-Bug for mosquito adulticide, the liquid chemical sprayed from trucks throughout the village. Additionally, the board approved a $7,145.60 purchase from Van Diest for mosquito larvicide bricks, which public works crews will drop into catch basins across town to kill mosquitoes before they hatch.
Fourth of July Commission Appointment:
With the summer festival season approaching, the board voted 6-0 to officially appoint resident Jessica Woodruff to the Fourth of July Commission. The commission is actively preparing for the village’s massive summer celebration, with Finance Chair Todd Kraus noting the village has already put down deposits for two separate fireworks displays.
Spring Newsletter Deadline:
Trustee Jessica Smith announced that village staff is currently drafting the Spring 2026 edition of the Beecher Bulletin newsletter. Any local organizations or commissions wishing to include articles or updates in the publication must submit their materials to Village Hall staff by March 31.
Latest News Stories
WATCH: Advocates urge action on trans sports ban
Advocacy groups praise Trump admin’s healthcare price transparency commitment
Trump: Chicago crime is down in spite of ‘incompetent’ Pritzker
‘Put politics aside’ to support no tax on tips, Illinois Democrat says
Former ‘Vegas’ coroner seeks county administrator job after journalist’s murder
WATCH: U.S. Supreme Court weighs trans sports ban
House Republicans unveil framework for second ‘big, beautiful bill’
Beecher Board Appoints Abbink as New Village Clerk
Pritzker: State will not build stadium for Bears
California doctor indicted in Louisiana for sending abortion pills
Bill Clinton skips out on closed-door deposition
Illinois uses state-run ACA exchange to extend deadline