Casey Amends Nuisance Ordinance to Standardize Penalties
Article Summary: The Casey City Council has approved an ordinance to ensure penalties for nuisance violations are consistent across all sections of the city code. The “clean-up” measure follows a broader update to nuisance regulations made several months ago.
Nuisance Ordinance Key Points:
- The council approved Ordinance #590 at its meeting on Monday, October 6, 2025.
- The amendment aligns penalties for violations, such as those related to junk vehicles, with the rest of the city’s nuisance code.
- Fines for violations will now be set at not less than $100 and not more than $750 for each offense.
- The council plans to hold future committee meetings to discuss further strengthening its nuisance enforcement regulations.
The Casey City Council on Monday, October 6, 2025, approved a corrective ordinance to standardize the penalties for nuisance violations throughout the city code. The action ensures that all nuisance offenses, including those related to inoperable vehicles, carry the same range of fines.
City Attorney Tracy Willenborg explained that the change was a “clean-up” measure after a more comprehensive update to the city’s nuisance regulations several months ago. “We noticed when we were doing some enforcement that we missed one section,” she said. “What this does is just ensures that the various sections relative to nuisance vehicles match.”
Under the newly amended Ordinance #590, any person violating the provision shall be fined not less than $100 nor more than $750 for each offense. Each day a violation continues constitutes a separate offense.
The discussion prompted broader concerns among council members about property maintenance and what one alderman called a decline in “being a good neighbor.” Willenborg suggested the Ordinance Committee meet to discuss further revisions to address issues like junking next to residential properties and unsightly yards, a proposal the council supported.
Latest News Stories
Moore drops 31 as Lady Warriors top Rantoul for 3rd Place at Oakwood
Top-seeded Warriors roll past Okaw Valley in opener
Colorado lost record $24 million to data scams in 2024
Trump vows to pause migration after D.C. shooting
Assaults against ICE up 1,153% in 11 months
Illinois quick hits: Deer harvest totals; IHSA voting begins
Texas officials seek to establish Turning Point chapters
National Guard member shot near White House dies
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Casey-Westfield School Board for November 2025
Chicago tenant groups call for eviction moratorium amid ICE raids
Illinois tax proposals dampen decline in small business uncertainty index
Lady Warriors suffer first loss in physical battle with Heritage