Meeting Summary and Briefs: Beecher Village Board for June 8, 2026
Beecher Village Board Meeting | June 8, 2026
Overall Meeting Summary
The Beecher Village Board, meeting June 8 in the police department community room, handled a light but varied agenda with five of six trustees present. The board’s most concrete financial actions were a unanimous vote to waive bidding and buy a $69,522 public works truck from Terry’s Ford and a $38,300.12 tax-incentive payment to a business in the Illiana Crossroads Business Park (covered in separate stories). Trustees also recognized three departing Emergency Management Agency volunteers, the Murray family (covered separately), swore in a new police officer, approved monthly bills and directed the village attorney to begin a rewrite of the employee personnel manual. The meeting closed with the board moving into executive session to discuss personnel matters.
New police officer sworn in
The board welcomed a new police officer during the village clerk’s report, administering the oath of office to Matthew Maitlen. Maitlen affirmed the standard oath to support the U.S. and Illinois constitutions and to faithfully discharge the duties of the position. “Congratulations,” an official said, drawing a brief round of welcomes from those in attendance. The swearing-in was the lone personnel action taken in open session; trustees later moved into a closed session to discuss separate personnel matters.
Board approves $64,817.06 in bills
Trustee Todd Kraus, chair of the Finance and Administration Committee, moved to approve the village’s list of bills totaling $64,817.06, a figure confirmed in the meeting agenda. The committee’s monthly variance report was included in the board packet for review. The motion passed in a unanimous roll-call vote. No discussion accompanied the vote.
Personnel manual headed for rewrite
Trustees took no action on the substance of the village personnel manual but directed the village attorney to amend the governing resolution so the document can be rewritten. Officials described the changes as largely housekeeping — removing outdated terminology and provisions that no longer apply, including references to “tier one” and “tier two” language that members said no longer made sense. Other revisions would bring administrative employees in line with union staff on items such as travel-time pay and reflect updated state law. A board member said the manual changes themselves could come up for a vote at the next meeting.
Front-yard fence variance advances at 1469 Trailside
The board directed the village attorney to draft an ordinance granting a variance to install a fence in the front-yard area of the property at 1469 Trailside. Trustee Roger Stacey, chair of the Planning, Building and Zoning Committee, said the request was heard by the Planning and Zoning Commission at a public hearing on May 28, where commissioners voted unanimously to recommend approval. Findings of fact were attached to the board packet. The board’s vote directs the drafting of the ordinance; final adoption would occur at a later meeting. The next Planning and Zoning Commission meeting is set for Thursday, June 18 at 6 p.m. at village hall.
Anonymous donor offers to stock police pond
A village staff member told the board an out-of-town resident, who wishes to remain anonymous, has offered to stock the police department pond with sunfish, bluegill and catfish and to donate an aerator. A local firm, M3 Electric, has offered to donate labor to run electrical service to the pond. The staff member said the project could eventually host the Youth Commission’s annual fishing derby in coordination with police. The board reached a consensus to support the effort, with no trustees voicing opposition.
Youth Commission to become a nonprofit; summer kickoff draws about 150
Trustee Jessica Smith reported that the Youth Commission has voted to become a 501(c)(3) organization, allowing it to operate as a separate entity from the village — though still tied to it — chiefly to aid fundraising. Smith also said the commission’s annual “kickoff to summer” event the prior Saturday drew about 150 people, with the Lions Club donating hot dogs and chips. The commission’s next meeting is June 16 at 7:30 p.m.
Summer events fill village calendar
Several community events are approaching. The village’s first Concert in the Park of the season is scheduled for Saturday from 6 to 9 p.m. at Firemen’s Park, featuring the band the Burgundies, with a food truck on site. Preparations are also underway for the Fourth of July celebration, with ticket information available online and at village hall. In addition, the Law Enforcement Torch Run benefiting Special Olympics Illinois will pass through Beecher on Wednesday, June 10, around midday, with the run ending at Firemen’s Park and a barbecue for participants. The Historic Preservation Commission meets June 17 at 5 p.m. at the depot.
May tax revenue reported
During the clerk’s report, the board was told the village received total tax revenue of approximately $313,859.49 in May. (See Editorial Flags regarding the precision of this figure.)
Residents raise construction-permit concerns
During public comment, residents raised concerns about construction activity at neighboring properties, asking that building permits be posted and noting what they said was missing erosion-control (silt) fencing and a lack of site markings at a newly started excavation. Officials responded that the village’s legal counsel had advised it cannot block one property owner’s home construction simply because a separate, neighboring project remains unfinished, and that the properties involve different owners. Officials said the original project’s permits were pulled in 2025 and that the builder remains within the allowed one-year build window, which can be extended.
Executive session
The board moved to enter executive session under Section 2(c)(1) of the Open Meetings Act to discuss matters involving personnel. No formal action can be taken in closed session; any action would have to occur in open session after the board reconvenes. The provided materials end at the motion to enter executive session and do not reflect any subsequent open-session action.
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