Casey Seeks $250,000 State Grant to Demolish Old VFW Building

Spread the love

Casey City Council Meeting | July 6, 2026

Article Summary: The Casey City Council unanimously approved a resolution of support for a state community revitalization grant application to demolish the old VFW building downtown, committing a $50,000 local match — but the cleared site must stay open green space for five years.

CDBG Demolition Grant Key Points:

  • Resolution #070626B commits the city to a 20 percent local match of $50,000 on the estimated $250,000 demolition project if the grant is awarded.
  • The Economic Development Committee raised the match from an initial 10 percent to 20 percent to gain two additional points in the state’s competitive scoring.
  • The Illinois DCEO program is the first dedicated state grant funding available for demolishing commercial structures, with about $13 million allocated and roughly 20 awards expected.
  • Grant rules require demolished sites to remain open green space for five years — no buildings, parking lots or asphalt.

CASEY — The Casey City Council on Monday, July 6, 2026, unanimously approved Resolution #070626B, a resolution of support for the city’s application to the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity’s new Community Development Block Grant community revitalization program, targeting demolition of the old VFW building at 12 East General Roby Street.

The resolution authorizes the city to seek grant funding for the demolition project, estimated at $250,000, and commits a 20 percent local match of $50,000 if the award comes through. Alderman Marcy Mumford moved approval, Alderman Carlene Richardson seconded, and the roll call passed unanimously.

Economic Development Director Tom Daughhetee told the council the program, discussed at a June 22 Economic Development Committee meeting, fills a long-standing gap. “It was something a lot of communities have been waiting for a long time — finally some dedicated grant funding that could be used to demolish commercial buildings,” he said, noting past public grant funds could be used for residential demolitions but not commercial structures.

The program’s minimum award is $250,000 and its maximum is $2 million, Daughhetee said, with the state estimating it will make about 20 awards from roughly $13 million allocated this year. Applications are scored competitively on a rolling basis until the money runs out. No city match is required, but matches earn scoring points — which drove the committee’s decision to double its initial 10 percent match recommendation. “If 20 percent was going to give us some additional points for the possibility of getting it, we would go to an extra $25,000, because that could be a very big priority project for us,” Mayor Mike Nichols said.

Five-Year Open Space Requirement

Daughhetee attended a state webinar June 23 that clarified a significant string attached: cleared downtown sites must remain open space for five years. “They don’t want anything built on it,” he said, adding the state ruled out asphalt, rock covering and — explicitly — parking lots. Seeded green space with parklike features such as small seating or a walkway is acceptable.

“It’s not what we were hoping to hear,” Daughhetee acknowledged, saying many communities on the webinar had hoped to at least convert cleared lots to parking. Nichols said the restriction is workable. “The five-year wait doesn’t hurt us that bad, because in five years we can set aside enough monies to be able to complete a good project for additional parking down there and not be racing for funds,” he said.

The committee’s discussion had targeted both the old VFW building and the city-owned building just east of it at the corner of Southeast First and General Roby streets; the resolution as adopted names the VFW building. The city’s fiscal year 2027 appropriations ordinance, adopted the same night, includes $2 million in grant capacity and a $500,000 city share line for the program.

Because it is a CDBG program, next steps include completing the application, scheduling a public hearing at which the application will be available for public review, and then submitting. There is no fixed deadline, but with rolling review, Daughhetee and Nichols agreed: sooner is better.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

California Senate panel OKs bill helping overseas voters

California Senate panel OKs bill helping overseas voters

By Madeline ShannonThe Center Square Active-military voters stationed overseas, as well as expats, could more easily submit their ballots in elections if Senate Bill 970 passes in the California Legislature....
Congressional candidate caught in teen takeover

Congressional candidate caught in teen takeover

By Jim TalamontiThe Center Square An Illinois candidate for Congress says a teen takeover arrived like a storm at a Chicago grocery store where she was shopping this week. Christian...
U.S. lawmakers reach deal on key housing affordability bill

U.S. lawmakers reach deal on key housing affordability bill

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square In a rare instance of congressional unity, the House and Senate reached a bipartisan, bicameral agreement over legislation to boost housing supply and home ownership...
REPORT: 2M Illinoisans face $500 cut as Social Security faces cliff

REPORT: 2M Illinoisans face $500 cut as Social Security faces cliff

By Sean ReedThe Center Square New data and reports from the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget have shown that if no legislative action is taken soon, Social Security could...

Illinois Quick Hits: Cook County announces $20M in CVI spending

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle has announced $20 million of taxpayer funding for community violence intervention....
Rising prices growing concern in Illinois, U.S.

Rising prices growing concern in Illinois, U.S.

By Jim TalamontiThe Center Square As voters express growing concern over inflation, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker says federal policies are to blame. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’ May 2026...
Released version of US-Iran agreement allows more time for nuclear negotiations

Released version of US-Iran agreement allows more time for nuclear negotiations

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square An unnamed senior administration official read the existing memorandum of understanding between the U.S. and Iran to a group of reporters on Wednesday, a number...
Warsh shakes up Fed analysis, maintains interest rates

Warsh shakes up Fed analysis, maintains interest rates

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The central bank would implement new task forces to aid in deciding monetary policy, Kevin Warsh, the new chairman of the Federal Reserve, said Wednesday....
Educators seek balance between AI innovation, traditional learning

Educators seek balance between AI innovation, traditional learning

By Christine JohnsonThe Center Square The future of K-12 education as it relates to Artificial Intelligence (AI), and what can be done to preserve education at both the state and...
California governor faces fine for failure to report donations

California governor faces fine for failure to report donations

By Robert MattesonThe Center Square The California Fair Political Practices Commission plans to fine Gov. Gavin Newsom $31,500 for his failure to timely file 36 behested payment reports worth more...
Peoria school safety director faces criticism over social media post

Peoria school safety director faces criticism over social media post

By Catrina BarkerThe Center Square A social media post by Peoria Public Schools' Director of School Safety is drawing criticism from an education advocate who argues Illinois officials should apply...
Senate candidates discuss healthcare, immigration

Senate candidates discuss healthcare, immigration

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Voters in Colorado will head to the polls on June 30 to elect partisan candidates in a U.S. Senate race. Issues for the primary election...
Consumer group criticizes MLB after it scolded pitchers for writing Bible verses on hats

Consumer group criticizes MLB after it scolded pitchers for writing Bible verses on hats

By Tate MillerThe Center Square In light of Major League Baseball’s (MLB) reprimand of players who wrote Bible verses on their pride night hats, consumer protection organization Consumers’ Research launched...
Trump rounds out G7 with victory lap speech about tentative Iran deal

Trump rounds out G7 with victory lap speech about tentative Iran deal

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square This year’s G7 summit was “one of the most successful” ever according to President Donald Trump in a speech he gave Wednesday as it wrapped...
Clayton confirmation as new DNI delayed after Trump social media post

Clayton confirmation as new DNI delayed after Trump social media post

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Only days after urging the U.S. Senate to confirm Jay Clayton as Director of National Intelligence, President Donald Trump ordered senators to halt the process...