Politics & Government
La Grange Tax Hike Measure Way Ahead: 2024 Election Results
The park district tax increase would cost the owner of a $500,000 house an extra $71 a year.
LA GRANGE, IL – Support for the referendum to increase the Park District of La Grange's property taxes took a big lead in Tuesday's election.
With all precincts counted, 6,161, or 74 percent, voted for the measure, while 2,122, or 26 percent, were against it, according to unofficial returns.
In August, three board members for the Park District of La Grange voted to put the issue on the ballot. Two others were absent.
Find out what's happening in La Grangefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
If the measure passes, the district could go into debt by $13.9 million for nearly 25 years.
The tax increase is expected to cost the owner of a $500,000 house an extra $71 a year, according to the park district.
Find out what's happening in La Grangefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The park district said it sought the public's feedback, through a mailed survey, on what improvements residents would like to see.
Here are the highlights of what the park district would like to do with the money:
Community Center
- Add multiple sport courts
- Connect indoors and outdoors
Denning Park
- Add a six-hole disc golf course
- Add a soccer field on the southwest corner
- Expand half basketball court to full
- Increase pathways
Elm Park
- Fix the basketball court
Gilbert Park
- Expand parking lot
- Update 1990s-era playground
- Update three tennis courts
- Convert the fourth tennis court into a multiple sports court
Gordon Park
- Build a bandshell
- Add dog park
- Add pathways
- Add seating at the splash pad
Rotary Park
- Replace the playground
Sedgwick Park
- Convert two tennis courts into dedicated pickleball courts
- Improve sand volleyball courts
Spring Park
- Expand the pathway to go through the entire park, rather than halfway
- Replace 1970s-era shelter
In an email to Patch in August, Jenny Bechtold, the district's executive director, said the new tax would go toward capital projects and would not cover day-to-day operational costs.
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