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Hinsdale board previews $24.8 million 2026 budget, keeps 25% reserve and $7.4M in pay‑as‑you‑go capital

November 19, 2025 | Hinsdale, DuPage County, Illinois



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This article was created by AI summarizing key points discussed. AI makes mistakes, so for full details and context, please refer to the video of the full meeting. Please report any errors so we can fix them. Report an error »

Hinsdale board previews $24.8 million 2026 budget, keeps 25% reserve and $7.4M in pay‑as‑you‑go capital
The Village of Hinsdale on Nov. 18 reviewed a draft 2026 operating budget that projects $24,800,000 in total operating revenues and preserves a policy minimum 25% general fund reserve while funding roughly $7,400,000 in capital projects without issuing new debt.

President Greg Hart said the budget focuses on long-term financial stability and resident priorities while supporting pedestrian‑safety improvements and economic development. “The 2026 budget maintains our policy of a minimum 25% general fund reserve,” Hart said during his report.

Finance staff told trustees the draft shows operating expenditures of about $23,500,000, a 6.5% increase over 2025 driven largely by personnel, pension and benefit costs. Staff noted stronger-than-expected 2024–25 performance has increased ending reserves, enabling larger transfers to the capital improvement plan (CIP) and master infrastructure plan (MIP).

Key line items and assumptions include: projected revenue growth of 1.5% driven by stable property-tax growth and sales and income tax strength; transfers of $2,700,000 to the CIP and $2,000,000 to the MIP for 2026; and approximately $660,000 in capital grants earmarked for projects such as pool work and an elevator project. The budget documents also incorporate a new 20‑year MIP projection and a separate CIP fund beginning in 2026.

Trustees discussed rising police and fire pension contributions. Staff said statutory, statewide pension‑valuation assumptions — set by consolidated boards — drive higher required contributions; staff estimated an increase of roughly $385,000 in pension contributions for 2026 and noted that the village’s share of property‑tax growth for the levy year will generate about $369,000 more in property‑tax revenue, leaving a narrow $16,000 gap in the first approximation presented to the board.

Water and sewer fund highlights in the draft include a 4% assumed water‑rate increase to match anticipated charges from the DuPage Water Commission and a planned $200,000 engineering allocation to design lead service‑line replacements beginning in 2027, with estimated replacement costs of about $660,000 per year over a 10‑year program.

The full budget will be posted for public inspection on the village website on Nov. 26, and the board scheduled a public hearing for Dec. 9. After a public hearing and second reading, the Board expects to consider adoption that evening.

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