Beecher Trustee Warns of State Bills That Could Strip Local Zoning Control
Beecher Village Board Meeting | May 11, 2026
Article Summary: Trustee Jessica Smith on Monday, May 11, 2026, reported back from Illinois Municipal League Lobby Day in Springfield, telling the Beecher Village Board that pending state legislation could override local planning authority and force development the village’s water and sewer system may not have capacity to support.
IML Lobby Day Key Points:
- Smith said legislators were initially unaware how proposed state bills would affect smaller communities such as Beecher.
- One proposal would let builders hire their own private inspectors if the village couldn’t complete inspections within a tight turnaround, reportedly as short as 24 hours.
- Smith warned the bills in current form could leave Beecher without water and sewer capacity to support state-mandated development.
- Gov. JB Pritzker did not attend Lobby Day despite invitations, Smith said; votes on several measures are expected this month.
BEECHER — Trustee Jessica Smith, chair of the Economic Development and Community Events Committee, told the Beecher Village Board on Monday, May 11, 2026, that she returned from the Illinois Municipal League’s annual Lobby Day in Springfield with serious concerns about a package of state bills that could strip local control over planning, zoning and building inspections.
Smith said she met with state legislators during the event two weeks ago and came away believing that many lawmakers had not understood how the proposed measures would land in smaller communities. “I think we really are getting through to our legislators that um specifically the bill proposal and all of the Senate bills that go along with it are just not uh right for local government at this time,” Smith said.
Smith warned the legislation, in its current form, could undermine Beecher’s ability to manage its own infrastructure. “In its current form, it would be devastating for us because we could possibly not even have enough water and sewer capacity for the kind of development they’re talking about that they would be kind of forcing on,” she said. “We would have no control over the planning.”
Private Inspectors a Specific Concern
One element of the proposal would let builders hire their own private inspectors if the village were unable to complete inspections within a defined turnaround — reportedly as short as 24 hours for inspections, with plan review afforded somewhat more time. The private inspectors would need to be licensed, but Smith and other trustees said the arrangement removes village oversight of who is reviewing local construction.
“They would have to be licensed, but they don’t know who they’re hiring,” Smith said. “You have no nothing to say about it.” Another trustee added: “By the person who’s hiring them. They’re not going to tell them they found something wrong because then they’re not. Exactly.”
Governor Did Not Attend
Smith said Gov. JB Pritzker did not appear at Lobby Day despite invitations to multiple events. “Governor still was no show despite lots of reaching out and lots of invitations to different events,” she said. “So um he couldn’t be there to speak with us.”
Smith encouraged fellow trustees to use witness slip filings to register opposition when individual measures come before Senate and House committees, noting she has become familiar with the process and offered to help colleagues do the same. “It helps if you know, you go on record opposing it,” she said.
Smith said votes on several of the measures are expected this month, though she believes outreach to individual legislators has had an effect. “I think we got through to a lot of senators that just weren’t even aware of how it would affect local communities like ours that are smaller,” she said. “So, I think we opened a lot of eyes just by having these conversations.”
Smith said she will continue to forward bill alerts from the County Governmental League and the South Suburban Mayors and Managers Association to fellow trustees as the legislation moves.
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