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Stop the Mega-Dump courting township

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Mac McIntyre (left) speaks during a Stop the Mega-Dump public meeting Thursday while Dan Kenney listens in Cortland. The two urged Cortland Township residents to band together to stop the proposed landfill expansion. (Rob Winner – rwinner@shawmedia.com)

CORTLAND – While the window could be closing on an appeal to stop the landfill expansion, Stop the Mega-Dump members could lead the charge on a much larger, potentially groundbreaking case.

During a public meeting Thursday in Cortland, Stop the Mega-Dump leaders urged Cortland Township residents to band together and initiate a class-action lawsuit that would put a state law to the test for the first time and potentially give township governments a trump card over county government in garbage disposal decisions.

An Illinois statute that states township residents can prevent the deposit of garbage within township limits – including at refuse disposal facilities – could be the key and final opportunity for residents opposed to the landfill expansion to make a stand.

Because Cortland Township representatives have officially voiced their opposition to the landfill expansion to DeKalb County Board members multiple times, Stop the Mega-Dump member Mac McIntyre said there could be a strong legal challenge.

“We need your help and we need you to take ownership,” said McIntyre, explaining the lawsuit must start with the township and not the anti-landfill group.

The statute has never been challenged in court the way the group proposed Thursday, but members believed it could turn into a class-action lawsuit with many of the state’s townships joining in to gain more local control that has been depleted over the years.

Cortland resident Frankie Benson said she would attempt to lead the movement to start the suit, starting with a discussion among township trustees.

She said it would be difficult to get the needed support and enthusiasm to raise the money needed to start the lawsuit – potentially $10,000 – but believed it could be done.

“It’s just repeating the message … and showing the ways we’ve been walked over,” Benson said of rallying support. “This [township] is a very important body to us.”

Stop the Mega-Dump member Grace Mott noted the money needed to mount a legal challenge should not intimidate residents because the anti-landfill group proved it could be done through small donations by a large number of people.

Residents who showed up to the meeting already asked about how they could make donations.

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