Glendale Heights board approves consent agenda and six ordinances, including IDOT resurfacing agreement
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On March 5, 2026 the Glendale Heights Board of Trustees unanimously approved a consent agenda totaling $2,684,530.35 and adopted multiple ordinances and resolutions, including an IDOT local public agency agreement for Mill Pond Drive resurfacing and contracts for park, festival and utility work.
The Village of Glendale Heights Board of Trustees voted unanimously March 5 to approve a consent agenda that included payroll and accounts payable totaling $2,684,530.35 and multiple contracts and project authorizations.
The consent agenda included a resolution authorizing execution of a local public agency agreement with the Illinois Department of Transportation and confirming local appropriations for the Mill Pond Drive resurfacing project (TIP 08-24-0001, project QQ70593). The package also authorized a services agreement for the Armitage Creek restoration (Christopher Bieber Engineering), a purchase order to Westech Engineering LLC for replacement disc filter parts at the wastewater treatment plant, and a pay request to Performance Construction Engineering LLC for West Burdett sanitary improvements not to exceed $305,817.21.
Following a motion to waive first readings, the board adopted Ordinance 2026-14 (the IDOT agreement), Ordinance 2026-15 (sale of surplus personal property), Ordinance 2026-16 (award to ETS Intelligence LLC for security services at the 2026 Glendale Heights Fest), Ordinance 2026-17 (amendment to criteria for fees in lieu of land dedication), Ordinance 2026-18 (amendments to delinquent payments and discontinuance of water service) and Ordinance 2026-19 (amendments to animal licensing requirements). Mayor Giannelli presided over the votes and trustees approved each item by roll call.
Trustees discussed the water-service ordinance amendment briefly; a trustee noted it shortens the timeline to follow up on delinquencies so the village can connect residents with needed services sooner. Police Chief Pappas confirmed that animal-control limits (rabies tags required, a three-animal limit for adult dogs and cats, and leash requirements) remain in force and that the licensing ordinance addresses village licenses rather than those substantive limits.
The board also adopted several committee appointments and housekeeping resolutions (Resolutions 2026-R-21 through R-24) and closed the meeting without further public agenda discussion.
