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Local FOIA requests center on hot-button issues

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Most of the information requests the city clerks received were from people seeking details of certain properties in the city, including whether specific parcels have outstanding bills, violations or liens.

DeKalb and Sycamore schools

DeKalb School District 428 received two FOIA requests on the now-defunct land swap deal with ShoDeen Construction. In 2012, the school district considered trading Kiwanis Park for land the Geneva-based developer owned by Huntley Middle School.

Both requests sought information on the district’s land transactions since 2002.

Elizabeth Neurauter asked the Sycamore School District 427 for a copy of the state report on the district’s English Language Learners Program. She said she was one of the substitutes observed by state auditors, and she wanted to know how the program fared.

Mark Egan, a doctoral student at the University of Chicago, requested cost, size and bidding information about all new schools constructed within both districts for a study he was conducting.

DeKalb and Sycamore Park Districts

At least eight of the FOIA requests the DeKalb Park District received concerned the district’s role in the Nature Trail clear-cutting.

In November, contractors hired by ComEd removed trees and vegetation underneath and around the power lines next to the Nature Trail – a 1.5-mile prairie path located between Sycamore Road and First Street.

The FOIA requests sought to examine what the park district’s agreement with ComEd is, and what kind of communication about the trail was exchanged.

Keith Nyquist and his wife, Pattie, filed half the requests. Nyquist, a candidate for the park board in April, said his December FOIA was filed when not a lot of information was known about the clear-cutting.

“We were just trying to get some sort of answer as to what was going on,” Nyquist said.

By contrast, the Sycamore Park District received no FOIA requests during this time period.

What is FOIA?

• Anybody can submit a Freedom of Information Act request to any unit of government, be it the local city council or school board to a state agency in Illinois. The public body then has five business days after receiving the information to respond to the request or to request more time to find the information.


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