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Answers to Questions
SUBMIT ALL QUESTIONS FOR INFORMATION IN WRITING
To Village Clerk, Lakewood:
To City Clerk, Breese:
"Frequently municipalities require the individuals petitioning for annexation to pay the cost of preparing the annexation petition, the map of the area to be annexed, and an annexation fee which would cover a proportionate share of existing municipal utilities such as sewer and water."
To Alderman, Byron:
"The city can levy a forestry, tax of five cents per hundred dollar valuation, or for fifty cents per one thousand dollar valuation, after a referendum. The services of an attorney will of course be necessary to advise you as to the procedure and forms for the election. "Although some municipalities have adopted ordinances permitting village officers to go on private property to inspect or destroy trees infected with the Dutch Elm disease, I know of no statutory authority for such activity on private property, without the owner's consent."
To Mr. Sargent, Illinois Municipal League:
'All municipal officers except as otherwise provided shall receive the salary, fees or other compensation that is fixed by ordinance. After they are once fixed, these salaries, fees or other compensation shall not be increased or diminished so as to take effect during the time for which any such officer was elected or appointed. "The last paragraph above quoted was added by amendment in 1953. "Since prior to that amendment the clerk could have been given the duties of the collector by ordinance, the only purpose for the amendment seemed to be to permit an increase in the compensation of the clerk during the term of office when the duties of the two offices are combined. The location of this amendment is the only paragraph that provides that the compensation may not be increased during the term of office strengthens this view. "Consequently, I feel that the effect of this paragraph is to permit an increase in the compensation of an elected clerk during his term if he is appointed collector, or the collector's duties are assigned to him during the term. "The result could be accomplished in one of two ways: The clerk could be appointed as collector, and at the same time an ordinance could be passed declaring that the clerk should receive both the compensation established for that office and the compensation established for the collector. Or, I believe, it an ordinance were passed providing that the clerk shall be ex-officio collector and shall receive the compensation provided tor both offices that would suffice. "Such an ordinance could read as follows: "If the procedure followed is merely to appoint the clerk as collector, that appointment could be made in the usual way, and an ordinance could be passed reciting that: 'The clerk shall receive as compensation both the salary established for the office of clerk and the compensation established for the office of city collector.' "As I indicated above, I think that the clerk could be given the duties of collector during the term of his office as clerk, and that at that time his compensation could 'be increased up to but not to exceed $5,000 per year. But, I am of the opinion that once this is done this compensation could not be reduced during the balance of the clerk's term, even though the council might later wish to take from the clerk the duties of the collector and have those duties performed by a separately appointed collector." September 1958 / Illinois Municipal Review / Page 213
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