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Blog comments do not reflect the views or opinions of the Author or Ancel Glink. Some of the content may be considered attorney advertising material under the applicable rules of certain states. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Please read our full disclaimer

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

Grand Jury Subpoena in Possession of School District Not Exempt From FOIA


A requester sued a school district claiming it violated FOIA by improperly redacting certain names and other information in a federal grand jury subpoena received by the district. As part of its defense of the lawsuit, the school district submitted an affidavit signed by the school board president stating that the district relied on an opinion by the U.S Attorney’s Office stating that the grand jury subpoena was exempt from disclosure under several exemptions in the federal FOIA statute, and that disclosure of the subpoena would violate federal law and interfere with a criminal investigation. The circuit court ruled in favor of the school district, finding that it did not violate FOIA, but ordered the school district to disclose a copy of the subpoena with certain information unredacted.

On appeal, the Appellate Court ruled that the circuit court erred in determining that the school district properly redacted recipient names and other information contained in the subpoena in Edgar County Watchdogs v. Paris Union School District No. 95.

First, the Appellate Court held that the school district’s reliance on an opinion by the U.S. Attorney’s Office was misplaced, because the request was submitted to an Illinois public body under the Illinois FOIA statute, so federal FOIA’s statutory exemptions were inapplicable to this request.

Second, the Appellate Court rejected the school district’s argument that names in the subpoena were exempt from disclosure under Section 7(1)(a) of FOIA, because the school district did not demonstrate that any federal law or statute specifically prohibited disclosing those names.

Third, the Appellate Court determined that names of school district officials and employees in the subpoena "bear on" the duties of public employees, so disclosure would not cause a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy under Section 7(1)(c) of FOIA.

Next, the Appellate Court held that because the school district is not a law enforcement or correctional agency, had no investigatory role in the federal grand jury proceedings, and was not conducting an ongoing criminal investigation, and the school district did not demonstrate that the U.S. Attorney’s Office had a substantial interest in protecting names in the subpoena, the subpoena was not exempt under the law enforcement exemptions cited by the district.

Finally, because the school district’s asserted exemptions were not applicable, and the circuit court previously ordered the school district to release certain information that was originally redacted in its response to the FOIA request, the Appellate Court determined that the requester was a “prevailing” party in the FOIA lawsuit and could file a petition requesting the recovery of attorneys fees and costs as the prevailing party.  

Post Authored by Eugene Bolotnikov, Ancel Glink

Tuesday, January 6, 2026

PAC Finds Public Body in Violation of FOIA for Not Disclosing Termination Letter


The Public Access Counselor of the Illinois Attorney General's Office (PAC) issued a late binding opinion that did not make our year-end review of 2025 binding opinions, which we have summarized below.

In response to a FOIA request seeking a termination letter issued to former village clerk, a village entirely withheld the letter from disclosure pursuant to various exemptions under FOIA. Specifically, the village argued that several provisions of the Personnel Record Review Act (Act) prohibited the village from disclosing the letter in response to the FOIA request.

In its 16th binding opinion of 2025, the PAC concluded that the village improperly withheld the termination letter in response to the FOIA request. PAC Op. 25-016.

Although the Act permits an employee or their designated representative to review certain personnel records, the PAC determined that this right has no bearing on the availability of personnel records to third parties pursuant to FOIA. Even if the termination letter at issue was a record of disciplinary action taken against the former village clerk, the PAC determined that the Act did not require the Village to obtain the former village clerk’s consent before disclosing that letter to the FOIA requester. Instead, the Act merely required the village to give the former clerk notice of the FOIA request on or before the day that Village disclosed the letter in response to the FOIA request. The PAC also determined that the Act’s notice requirement to employees did not toll the village’s deadline to timely respond to the FOIA request. Therefore, the PAC concluded that the village did not demonstrate that the letter was exempt from disclosure under Section 7(1)(a) of FOIA.

Because the termination letter at issue did not contain any personal information which, if disclosed, would cause the former clerk a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy, and the letter itself directly bears on the public duties of the former village clerk, the PAC concluded that the letter was not exempt from disclosure under Section 7(1)(c) of FOIA.

Although the village argued that the termination letter included its decision-making rationale for terminating the former clerk, the PAC determined that the village never conducted an adjudicatory proceeding pertaining to the former clerk’s dismissal, so the Village did not demonstrate that the letter was exempt from disclosure pursuant to Section 7(1)(n) of FOIA.

Post Authored by Eugene Bolotnikov, Ancel Glink

Friday, January 2, 2026

Social Media & Local Government Book Recently Published by ABA


It's a new year and time for a new book for those who advise and work with local governments on social media legal issues. The ABA recently published my book "Social Media & Local Governments: Navigating the New Public Square," which is intended to be a practical and legal resource for local government lawyers, officials, and employees on the various legal issues that arise in local government use and regulation of social media. 

You can find the book here.

Wednesday, December 31, 2025

It's Not Goodbye Yet...


A little more than 14 years ago, I created Municipal Minute because I love to write and I thought it would be a helpful resource for local government officials and employees on all things local gov - it wasn't because I am a self-described local government nerd, really. As many of you know, I am retiring at the end of 2025 but I'm not yet ready to give up Municipal Minute, so I will continue authoring the blog through 2026. So, my plan is to be mostly-retired (as opposed to semi-retired) since I am also staying on at Ancel Glink to do some part-time consulting work. I hope you stick around to see what's new in the local gov world moving forward and what interesting developments come out of the courts, legislature, and PAC office. 

Thank you for your continued readership!

Julie Tappendorf (soon-to-be-mostly-retired)


Tuesday, December 30, 2025

Summary of 2025 Binding PAC Opinions (OMA)


Following our earlier summary of the 2025 PAC binding opinions on FOIA, today we focus on the PAC’s 3 binding opinions issued on OMA matters in 2025, which are summarized below.

PAC Op. 25-007 (City Committee was Subsidiary Body Subject to OMA)

In PAC Op. 25-007, the PAC found that a city pool committee (Committee) violated the OMA by holding meetings closed to the public regarding building a new pool in a city, because the Committee was a “subsidiary body” subject to OMA requirements. The PAC determined that the Committee was a subsidiary body because it did not legally exist independently on the city, the city exerted significant governmental control over the Committee, the Committee performed governmental activities typically performed by a municipal committee, and the Committee received at least some indirect public funding by virtue of being part of the city.

PAC Op. 25-009 (Board Violated OMA by Not Naming Candidate for Appointment)

In PAC Op. 25-009, the PAC concluded that a village board violated Section 2(e) of the OMA because it took “final action” by voting on a motion to appoint a person to fill a vacancy on the village board without providing sufficient detail to inform the public about the matter being voted on, because the board did not name or identify the person whose appointment the board considered prior to taking the vote.

PAC OP. 25-011 (improper meeting)

In PAC Op. 25-011, the PAC determined that a county board violated the OMA by holding an improper private meeting when a majority of a quorum of the board discussed public business at an informational event hosted by a private energy company, without posting advance notice of the meeting and complying with other OMA requirements. While there were no specific items concerning the energy company pending before the board, and the board did not reach an accord on any specific matters at the event, the event was nonetheless a meeting subject to OMA’s requirements, because a majority of a quorum of board members engaged in the collective inquiry phase of deliberations by gathering and exchanging information concerning the renewable energy project in anticipation of possibly taking future action. 

Post Authored by Eugene Bolotnikov, Ancel Glink

Monday, December 29, 2025

Summary of 2025 Binding PAC Opinions (FOIA)


It's that time of year when we close out 2025 with a summary of the binding opinions issued by the Illinois Attorney General's Public Access Counselor's office (PAC). To-date, the PAC has issued 14 binding opinions, which are all published on the Attorney General's website. Today, we will focus on the PAC’s 11 binding opinions on FOIA.

PAC Op. 25-003, PAC Op. 25-005 (Failure to respond to FOIA requests)

In binding opinions PAC Op. 25-003 and PAC Op. 25-005, the PAC found that several public bodies violated FOIA by failing to respond to FOIA requests. 

PAC Op. 25-001 (Disclosing Electronic Records in Format Specified by Requester)

In PAC Op. 25-001¸the PAC found that a County Housing Authority violated Section 6(a) of FOIA by disclosing a password-protected locked versions of Microsoft Excel budget workbooks, instead of unlocked versions sought by the requester, because the requester specifically requested an unlocked versions, and it was feasible for the Authority to disclose the unlocked versions 

PAC Op. 25-002 (Improperly Withheld Resignation/Termination Records)

In PAC Op. 25-002, the PAC concluded that a city police department improperly withheld termination/resignation letters, because it did not demonstrate how and why disclosing the records would interfere with either (1) a pending or actually and reasonably contemplated law enforcement proceeding, (2) an active administrative enforcement proceeding, or (3) create a substantial likelihood of depriving people of a fair trial or an impartial hearing. The PAC also determined that the records were not exempt from disclosure pursuant to Section 7(1)(d-6) of FOIA, because the Illinois Police Training Act does not exempt local law enforcement agencies from disclosing public records subject to FOIA.

PAC Op. 25-004 (Record Not “Related to” Adjudicatory Proceeding)

In PAC Op. 25-004, the PAC found that a municipal police department improperly withheld a video recording of a former deputy chief's DUI arrest pursuant to Section 7(1)(n) of FOIA, because the video was created before any disciplinary proceeding took place and existed independently on the subsequent adjudication. The PAC stated that a record can only "relate to" an adjudication within the meaning of Section 7(l)(n) of FOIA if it is created in the process of conducting the adjudication itself.

PAC Op. 25-006 (Settlement Records Improperly Withheld)

In PAC Op. 25-006, the PAC found that that a city department improperly withheld a settlement records concerning a class action lawsuit against a named alderperson pursuant to Section 7(1)(m) of FOIA, because the alderperson was represented by a private attorney, while the city was represented by attorneys from its law department, so the parties had separate interests in the subject matter of the withheld record, and there was no indication that the city’s attorney were acting as the alderperson’s attorneys in connection with the settlement. Because the withheld record was not an attorney-client privileged communication, and related to the obligation, receipt, or use of city funds regarding the settlement, the PAC determined that the public had a right to know the purposes for which public funds were expended in connection with the settlement.

PAC Op. 25-008 (Record of Billing Dispute with Former Attorney Improperly Withheld)

In PAC Op. 25-008¸ the PAC found that an email attachment regarding a billing dispute between a school district with its former attorney was improperly withheld pursuant to Section 7(1)(m) of FOIA, because the record pertained to a billing dispute and did not reveal the substance of matters for which the school district sought legal advice or any legal advice the school district’s former attorneys provided while acting as their legal advisor. The record was also not exempt pursuant to Section 7(1)(f) of FOIA, because the record did not reflect deliberations with a third party acting on the school district’s behalf, since the school district’s former attorney was acting with independent interests that were not aligned with the school district’s interests at the time of the communication. 

PAC Op. 25-010 (Separation Agreement Improperly Withheld)

In PAC Op. 25-010, the PAC concluded that a public body improperly withheld a police officer’s separation agreement pursuant to Sections 7(1)(b) and 7(1)(c) of FOIA, because the withheld records concerned a public employee’s separation from employment which "bears on the public duties" of a public employee," and are therefore subject to disclosure. However, the public body was authorized to discreetly redact exempt private or personal information within the record.

PAC Op. 25-012 (Construction Plans Properly Withheld)

In PAC Op. 25-012, the PAC found that a county land use department properly withheld construction-related technical documents relating to a proposed commercial solar farm, because the records were commissioned by the private company, and no public funds were used to construct or develop the project, so these records were per se exempt from disclosure pursuant to Section 7(1)(k), and the department did not have to demonstrate that disclosure would compromise the security of the project.

PAC Op. 25-013 (Improperly Charged Fee for Electronic Copy of Report)

In PAC Op. 25-013, the PAC determined that a city violated Section 6(a) of FOIA by improperly assessing a fee for disclosing an electronic copy of the incident report. Because state law does not expressly authorize imposing a statutory fee in excess of the cost of the recording medium for electronic copies of incident reports, and it was feasible for the city to disclose the report in the electronic format without the need to purchase a recording medium, the city was prohibited by FOIA from assessing the requester a fee for disclosing an electronic copy of the incident report.

PAC Op. 25-014 (Imposing “redaction charge” violates FOIA)

In PAC Op. 25-014, the PAC determined that a city police department violated FOIA by imposing a per minute “redaction charge” for redacting body camera footage. Because FOIA imposes fiscal obligations on public bodies, Section 6 of FOIA does not authorize reimbursing public bodies for redaction costs, and FOIA restricts fees for electronic records to the cost of purchasing the "recording medium" (i.e., CD, flash drive) and not other costs, the police department could not impose a "redaction charge" on FOIA requesters.

PAC Op. 25-015 (Redactions improper)

A requester filed a FOIA request with a county state's attorney's office (SAO) seeking copies of records showing law enforcement officers or experts who responded "yes" to a question on a "Brady/Giglio Form" regarding professional misconduct, credibility, or disciplinary history. The SAO provided four police officer questionnaires but redacted the officers' names, as well as other information. The requester filed a request for review with the PAC, and the PAC issued binding opinion PAC Op. 25-015finding that the redactions were improper because the information was not exempt under FOIA's personal privacy exemption because the information "bears on the public duties of public employees."  The PAC also rejected the SAO's other arguments that the information was exempt under the "deliberative privilege" and attorney-client privilege exemptions, finding that the SAO did not prove by clear and convincing evidence that those exemptions applied.

Post Authored by Eugene Bolotnikov, Ancel Glink 

Friday, December 26, 2025

Seventh Circuit Finds No Fourth Amendment Violation in Police Pursuit Case


City police officers responded to a report of gunshots in Chicago’s Austin neighborhood. While investigating the report, the officers approached Juan Mendez on the front porch of his home. Mendez initially did not respond to the officers questions and suddenly fled. A brief foot chase ensued during which Mendez jumped a fence and ran down an alley. According to body-worn camera footage of the incident, Mendez held an unidentified object in his right hand as he was running from the officers. The officers shouted warnings at Mendez and then fired three shots. Mendez fell to the ground and a gun landed nearby.

Mendez sued the City of Chicago and the responding officers alleging excessive use of force, battery, and an indemnification claim against the City for the actions of the officers. The district court reviewed the body-camera footage of the event and concluded that a reasonable officer would have had probable cause to belief that Mendez threatened the safety of the officers.

Mendez appealed, and the Seventh Circuit upheld the district court's ruling in favor of the City in Mendez v. City of Chicago. First, the Court considered whether the officers had probable cause to believe that the suspect posed a threat of serious harm to the officers or the public. If the officers had probable cause, it would be constitutionally reasonable to prevent escape by using deadly force. Like the district court, the Seventh Circuit reviewed the video footage and determined that, based on the totality of the circumstances, the officers had probable cause to believe that Mendez posed a threat to the safety of others.

The Court also resolved Mendez’s claims for battery and indemnification. The Court held that because the officers had a reasonable belief as to the threat of danger posed by Mendez, their conduct did not rise to the level of willful and wanton, and, as a result, the officers were granted immunity under the Tort Immunity Act. Because the individual officers were not liable, Mendez’s claim that the City had a duty to indemnify the actions of the officers also failed.

Post Authored by Alexis Carter, Ancel Glink

Tuesday, December 23, 2025

The New Year Countdown – Amendments to the Illinois Vehicle Code


This year, Municipal Minute will be counting down to the New Year with updates on legislation that will be effective starting on January 1, 2026.

Public Act 104-0141 amends the Illinois Vehicle Code to update the definition of the word “bicycle” following the recent e-bike trend. Previously, a “bicycle,” for purposes of the Illinois Vehicle Code, was defined as: “Every device propelled by human power upon which any person may ride, having two tandem wheels except scooters and similar devices.”

Under this Act, the definition has been replaced with: “Every human-powered device and every low-speed electric bicycle, as defined in Section 1-40.10, with two or more pedals, and designated seats for the transportation of one or more persons.”

This revision incorporates bicycles with more than two wheels (a ‘trike’) and low-speed e-bikes. Riders of these types of bicycles will now be required to follow the same rules of the road for regular bicycles. 

Post authored by Alexis Carter, Ancel Glink

Monday, December 22, 2025

The New Year Countdown – Addition to Capital Development Board Act


This year, Municipal Minute will be counting down to the New Year with updates on legislation that will be effective starting on January 1, 2026.

Public Act 104-0313 makes an addition to the Capital Development Board Act. This new section provides that units of local government cannot enforce ordinance or permitting requirements against the construction, reconstruction, improvement, or installation of a State facility. There are two exceptions, municipalities may enforce: 1) ordinances or permitting requirements of sanitary and municipally owned wastewater systems, and 2) rules or regulations related to environmental protection.

Friday, December 19, 2025

The New Year Countdown – Township Open Spaces


This year, Municipal Minute will be counting down to the New Year with updates on legislation that will be effective starting on January 1, 2026.

Public Act 104-0048 amends the Township Code to provide more flexibility in township-owned open spaces. Township open land refers to the land and water held by townships for preservation, recreation, and natural conservation purposes. The definition of “open land” was revised to include any area of land or water with an area of twelve acres or more (previously 50 acres or more). Expansion of the definition of “open land” to include smaller parcels will allow townships to preserve and maintain publicly held land for the benefit of future generations and otherwise promote the conservation of the environment.

This amendment also provides that a Township Board may not sell, convey, donate, or otherwise dispose of any part of open space without first passing a referendum approved by a majority of the voters of the township at a regular election.

Post authored by Alexis Carter, Ancel Glink

Thursday, December 18, 2025

The New Year Countdown – Local Government Lift-Assist Services


This year, Municipal Minute will be counting down to the New Year with updates on legislation that will be effective starting on January 1, 2026.

Public Act 104-0057 amends the Municipal Code and the Fire Protection District to allow municipalities and fire protection districts to collect reasonable fees from assisted living facilities and nursing homes to cover lift assistance services provided to residents of these facilities. Lift-assist service fees can be imposed for every service after the sixth service provided to that specific facility in one year.

A lift assist service is a response by first responders in order to lift a patient from their current position to a desired position. While these lifts do not occur in response to a request for an ambulance ride to the hospital or emergency room, they can still utilize limited resources of municipalities and fire protection districts. This legislation will allow fire protection districts and municipalities to recover some of these costs and alleviate some strains on limited financial resources of government bodies.

Post authored by Alexis Carter, Ancel Glink