Meeting Summary and Briefs: Casey City Council for May 18, 2026

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Casey City Council Meeting | May 18, 2026

The Casey City Council moved through a substantial agenda on Monday, May 18, 2026, with its most consequential action being the approval of utility rate increases across gas, electric, water and sewer to address a deficit of more than $900,000 in the city’s utility operations (see “Casey to Raise Utility Rates Across Gas, Electric, Water and Sewer After $900,000 Shortfall”). The council also approved two easement ordinances tied to utility development north of Interstate 70 (see “Casey Approves Two Easement Ordinances for North-of-Interstate Utility Work”) and annexed several city-owned properties to correct boundary errors in county records (see “Casey Annexes City-Owned Properties to Correct Boundary ‘Donut Holes'”). Officials additionally discussed installing cameras and a possible ban on electric bikes at the city park following extensive vandalism (see “Casey Moves to Curb Park Vandalism With Cameras, Possible E-Bike Ban”).

The council approved its consent items and heard reports from staff and aldermen on a range of other matters summarized below.

CEFS Work Experience Agreement Approved

The council unanimously approved Resolution No. 051826A, authorizing execution of a work experience agreement with C.E.F.S. Economic Opportunity Corporation. Economic Development Director Tom Daughhetee said the program uses federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act funds, administered by C.E.F.S., to place a young person in a first-job work experience at no cost to the city. The worker is fully an employee of C.E.F.S., which provides the wages and workers’ compensation coverage. Daughhetee said the placement is already helping in the city office and is eligible to work up to 29 hours per week under a roughly one-year agreement. The packet identifies the position as an office assistant supervised by City Clerk Jeremy Mumford.

Family Dollar Grocery Push During Public Forum

Resident Rebecca Lynch, of 104 East Madison, used the public forum to ask the council to support an effort to bring produce and grocery items to the local Family Dollar. Lynch said store manager Tara Davis has been working to persuade corporate management and that pressure from the community and customers carries more weight than a request from a store manager alone. A council member agreed to speak with Davis and draft a letter to corporate. Officials also noted that area Dollar General stores are rumored to be converting to a market format, potentially expanding local grocery options.

City Hall Parking Lot Resurfacing Floated

Public Works Director Ryan Staley told the council that the contractor handling crosswalk striping at Main and the highway offered to resurface and restripe the City Hall parking lot for $9,500 — roughly the same price quoted about two years earlier. Staley said he did not want to commit to the roughly $10,000 expense without council input. Officials asked him to bring the item back for further discussion, noting the work would likely be cheaper now than next year.

Land Bank Lot Sales Draw Strong Interest

Daughhetee reported that requests for proposals on vacant lots were opened May 8 by Mike Davis of the Central Illinois Land Bank Authority. One bidder came in for a single-side property, and 13 applications were received for five developable lots. Daughhetee said it appears a builder is lined up for each of the five lots and that, because one is a dual lot, the city could see six new homes within about a year.

Tourism Marketing Campaign Unveiled

Daughhetee previewed a new tourism marketing campaign produced by Mammoth Marketing, featuring a 30-second video spot with the tagline “Stay a little longer in Casey, Illinois.” He said a 15-second version will also be created and that distribution will be purely digital through over-the-top streaming services such as Hulu, Amazon Prime and Disney+. The campaign will target the Indianapolis and St. Louis markets over June, July and August.

Park Siren Inquiry

EMA Director David Craig reported that the Founders Day parade went well and asked staff to follow up on a report from a resident near the park who heard an unfamiliar warning alarm. Officials said a siren remains at the utility buildings near the park and that newer siren equipment is at the shop awaiting installation.

Finance Committee Continues Budget Work

Wilson, reporting for the Finance Committee in the absence of Alderman Steve Jenkins, said the committee worked through budget items including police administrative costs, salaries, motel tax, tourism promotion and corporate administration at its May 13 meeting. The committee scheduled additional meetings and expects to present a final budget to the full council, with approval targeted for the last meeting in July.

Street Damage on Northeast 9th Reported

Alderman Tanner Brown reported significant pavement damage on Northeast 9th Street where a garbage truck repeatedly turns out of an alley serving a trailer park, creating a ditch-like depression. Staley said the street was already slated for oil-and-chip work this summer and that he would examine whether a patch or a more permanent solution, possibly relocating trash pickup, is warranted.

Handicap Sign Request

Alderman Carlene Richardson relayed a request, made on behalf of a local VFW, for a handicap sign at the entrance. Because the location is private property, officials said the city would not install a sign there but offered to provide a spare sign for the organization to place itself.

Regional Mayors’ Group Launched

Nichols reported on a new quarterly regional roundtable for area mayors, clerks and managers, organized by the municipal support group that assisted Casey with its public works director hiring. He said roughly six of about 30 invited communities attended the initial meeting, which focused on connecting officials and sharing resources, including the idea of communities jointly purchasing expensive equipment.

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