From the Daily Herald:
Settle differences behind closed doors, expert tells village board
By Larissa Chinwah | Daily Herald Staff
Published: 11/13/2007 12:10 AM
Could talks behind closed doors, away from cameras, the media and the public eye,
help Carpentersville trustees iron out hostilities and bury acrimonious feelings
once and for all?
A public administration expert says yes.
Village officials on Monday said Gerald Gabris, a professor in the public administration
division at Northern Illinois University, suggested trustees meet in executive
session to address problems among the seven-member board.
Gabris, who made the suggestion at the village's strategic planning session on
Saturday, would not comment Monday.
"We argue over petty stuff and we need to start being more efficient in handling
matters that should be relatively routine," Village President Bill Sarto
said. "Things need to be minimalized so everything is not an argument and
contentious."
Village Manager Craig Anderson said an exception to the state's Open Meetings
Act would allow the board to meet in closed session to deal with matters of self-evaluation,
practices and procedures or professional ethics.
If the village board does schedule such a meeting, Anderson said a representative
of the Illinois Municipal League must be present to comply with the Illinois Open
Meetings Act.
"We need to look at the board dynamics and deal with how board members work
together," Anderson said. "This is a route for the board to go if they
are interested in doing that."
Sarto said he would support any effort to "get the board to the point of
functioning better."
"Some of the discussions we have are like little kids fighting with each
other," Sarto said. "It is embarrassing. I would prefer we weren't doing
these things. It shouldn't be aired on Comcast, in front of the media, or in front
of the public."
But not all trustees are convinced the special meeting will solve the board's
problems.
"I think some things will be said that people will not want to hear,"
Trustee Paul Humpfer said. "There are differences in opinions on the board
and I don't think they are going to change. I am pretty tentative."
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