Manhattan-Elwood Library Board Explores Land Annexation Options, Delays Lot Discussion
Manhattan-Elwood Public Library District Meeting | February 23, 2026
Article Summary: The Manhattan-Elwood Public Library District Board of Trustees instructed its legal counsel to explore options regarding potential land annexation following the receipt of a recent statutory notice.
Manhattan-Elwood Annexation Key Points:
-
The board unanimously approved a motion to have its legal team investigate options for potentially annexed land.
-
Trustees officially received a Statutory Annexation Notice dated February 18, 2026.
-
Discussions regarding an old business item for a lot at 224 Mississippi were delayed to March due to a recent change in local village administration.
The Manhattan-Elwood Public Library District Board of Trustees on Monday, February 23, 2026, directed its legal team to explore options regarding potential territorial and property expansion after receiving a formal annexation notice.
During the meeting’s correspondence period, the board formally acknowledged receipt of a Statutory Annexation Notice dated February 18, 2026. While the exact location and acreage of the land in question were not specified in the meeting documents, the notice prompted immediate administrative action from the board.
During the New Business portion of the meeting, Trustee Julie Mason made a motion to continue having the district’s legal counsel explore options regarding the potential annexed land. Trustee Keri English provided the second for the motion. The board approved the legal inquiry unanimously via a roll call vote.
In a separate property-related matter, the board was scheduled to discuss Old Business regarding a lot located at 224 Mississippi. However, the board opted to move the item to the upcoming March agenda without taking action. According to the minutes, the delay was necessary because the “previous village administrator retired and there is a new administrator handling the information.”
Latest News Stories
Chicago proposes funding tax rebates with salaries from vacant city jobs
Ceasefire remains in effect as U.S., Iran exchange fire
Federal judges temporarily block Alabama redistricting map
Build America 250 Act would help Uber, Lyft with lawsuits
Supreme Court declines hearing Catholic donations case
Investigation: Sanders’ anti-oligarchy tour spent $608k on elite travel
Illinois news in brief: Prosecutors charge man with using care in attempt to kill cops; Military higher education bill goes to governor; Burrito chain closes locations in Chicago area
Lincoln-Way North to Host TV Pilot Filming Under $210,000 Rental Deal
Analysts: Redistricting to cost taxpayers, while slowly shifting election outcomes
Trump honors fallen service members, vows Iran will not obtain nuclear weapon
Stephen Colbert returns to community show after final ‘Late Show’ appearance
TVA reports solid financial results, acknowledges resource plan delays