Division 15 - Elected Officers Generally
(65 ILCS 5/Art. 3.1 Div. 15 heading)
DIVISION 15.
ELECTED OFFICERS GENERALLY
(65 ILCS 5/3.1‑15‑5) (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1‑15‑5)
Sec. 3.1‑15‑5. Officers to be elected. In all cities incorporated under this Code there shall be elected a mayor, aldermen, a city clerk, and a city treasurer (except in the case of a city of 10,000 or fewer inhabitants that, by ordinance, allows for the appointment of a city treasurer by the mayor, subject to the advice and consent of the city council). In all villages and incorporated towns, there shall be elected a president, trustees, and a clerk, except as otherwise provided in this Code.
(Source: P.A. 87‑1119; 88‑572, eff. 8‑11‑94.) |
(65 ILCS 5/3.1‑15‑10) (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1‑15‑10)
Sec. 3.1‑15‑10. Mayor; president. The chief executive officer of a city shall be a mayor. The chief executive officer of a village shall be a village president, who may also be called a mayor. The chief executive officer of an incorporated town shall be a president, who may also be called a mayor. The chief executive officer shall hold office for 4 years and until a successor is elected and has qualified, except in municipalities that have adopted a 2 year term as provided in Section 3.1‑10‑65 and except in a village or incorporated town that, before January 1, 1942, has adopted a 2 year term for the chief executive officer.
(Source: P.A. 87‑1119.) |
(65 ILCS 5/3.1‑15‑15) (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1‑15‑15)
Sec. 3.1‑15‑15. Holding other offices. A mayor, president, alderman, trustee, clerk, or treasurer shall not hold any other office under the municipal government during the term of that office, except when the officer is granted a leave of absence from that office or except as otherwise provided in Sections 3.1‑10‑50 and 3.1‑35‑135. Moreover, an officer may serve as a volunteer fireman and receive compensation for that service.
(Source: P.A. 87‑1119.) |
(65 ILCS 5/3.1‑15‑20) (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1‑15‑20)
Sec. 3.1‑15‑20. Administering oaths. The mayor of a city, the president of a village or incorporated town, the clerk, the chairman of a plan commission, and the chairman of a zoning board of appeals of a municipality have power to administer oaths and affirmations on all lawful occasions. The corporate authorities by ordinance may authorize other municipal officers to administer oaths.
(Source: P.A. 87‑1119.) |
(65 ILCS 5/3.1‑15‑25) (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1‑15‑25)
Sec. 3.1‑15‑25. Conservators of the peace; service of warrants.
(a) After receiving a certificate attesting to the successful completion of a training course administered by the Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board, the mayor, aldermen, president, trustees, marshal, deputy marshals, and policemen in municipalities shall be conservators of the peace. Those persons and others authorized by ordinance shall have power (i) to arrest or cause to be arrested, with or without process, all persons who break the peace or are found violating any municipal ordinance or any criminal law of the State, (ii) to commit arrested persons for examination, (iii) if necessary, to detain arrested persons in custody over night or Sunday in any safe place or until they can be brought before the proper court, and (iv) to exercise all other powers as conservators of the peace prescribed by the corporate authorities.
(b) All warrants for the violation of municipal ordinances or the State criminal law, directed to any person, may be served and executed within the limits of a municipality by any policeman or marshal of the municipality. For that purpose, policemen and marshals have all the common law and statutory powers of sheriffs.
(Source: P.A. 90‑540, eff. 12‑1‑97.) |
(65 ILCS 5/3.1‑15‑30) (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1‑15‑30)
Sec. 3.1‑15‑30. Minority representation.
(a) Whenever the question of incorporation as a city under this Code is submitted for adoption to the electors of any territory, village, incorporated town, or city under special charter, there may be submitted at the same time for adoption or rejection the question of minority representation in the city council. The proposition shall be in the following form:
Shall minority representation in the city council be |
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(b) If a majority of the votes cast on the question at any election are for minority representation in the city council, the members of the city council, except as otherwise provided, thereafter shall be elected as provided in Section 3.1‑15‑35.
(c) The city council, at least 30 days before the first day fixed by law for the filing of candidate petitions for the next general municipal election, shall apportion the city by dividing its population, as ascertained by an official publication of any national, state, school, or city census, by any number not less than 2 nor more than 6. The quotient shall be the ratio of representation in the city council. Districts shall be formed of contiguous and compact territory and contain, as near as practicable, an equal number of inhabitants.
(d) If a majority of the votes cast on the question at any election are against minority representation in the city council, the members of the city council shall be elected as otherwise provided in this Code.
(e) At any time after the incorporation of a city under this Code, on petition of electors equal in number to one‑eighth the number of legal votes cast at the next preceding general municipal election, the city clerk shall certify the question of the adoption or retention of minority representation to the proper election authority for submission to the electors of that city. The proposition shall be in the same form as provided in this Section, except that the word "retained" shall be substituted for the word "adopted" when appropriate. A question of minority representation, however, shall not be submitted more than once within 32 months.
(f) If the city council of any city adopting minority representation as provided in this Section has not fixed a ratio of representation and formed the districts by the time specified in this Section, those acts may be done by any later city council. All official acts done and ordinances passed by a city council elected at large by the electors of a city that has adopted a minority representation plan shall be as valid and binding as if the aldermen had been elected from districts.
(Source: P.A. 87‑1119.) |
(65 ILCS 5/3.1‑15‑35) (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1‑15‑35)
Sec. 3.1‑15‑35. Aldermen under minority representation plan. Every district under a minority representation plan shall be entitled to 3 aldermen. Aldermen shall hold their offices for 4 years and until their successors have been elected and qualified, except in cities that have adopted a 2 year term under Section 3.1‑10‑65. There shall be elected in each district as many aldermen as the district is entitled to. In all of these elections for aldermen, each elector may cast as many votes as there are aldermen to be elected in the elector's district, or may distribute his or her votes, or equal parts of the votes, among the candidates as the elector sees fit. The candidate highest in votes is elected if only one alderman is elected; the candidates highest and next highest in votes are elected if only 2 aldermen are elected; and the 3 highest candidates in votes are elected when 3 aldermen are elected. Vacancies shall be filled as provided in Sections 3.1‑10‑50 and 3.1‑10‑55 by either interim election or appointment. An appointment to fill a vacancy shall be made within 60 days after the vacancy occurs. The requirement that an appointment be made within 60 days is an exclusive power and function of the State and is a denial and limitation under Article VII, Section 6, subsection (h) of the Illinois Constitution of the power of a home rule municipality to require that an appointment be made within a different period after the vacancy occurs.
(Source: P.A. 87‑1052; 87‑1119; 88‑45.) |
(65 ILCS 5/3.1‑15‑40) (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1‑15‑40)
Sec. 3.1‑15‑40. Staggered elections under minority plans. In all cities that adopt or have adopted the minority representation plan for the election of aldermen and have not already staggered the terms of their aldermen, the city council may provide by ordinance that at any ensuing general municipal election for city officers the aldermen in every alternate district shall be elected for one term of 2 years and, at the expiration of that term of 2 years, for regular terms of 4 years. This Section does not prohibit a city from voting in favor of a 2 year term for city officers as provided in Section 3.1‑10‑65. The provisions of the general election law shall govern elections under this Section.
(Source: P.A. 87‑1119.) |