Will County Board Graphic.03

Will County Hears Proposal to Establish County-Focused Land Bank for Distressed Properties

Spread the love

Will County Board Executive Committee Meeting | May 14, 2026

Article Summary: The Will County Board Executive Committee on Thursday, May 14, 2026, heard an introductory presentation from Will County Center for Economic Development official Doug Pryor on the possibility of establishing a Will County-focused land bank to return tax-delinquent, abandoned and vacant properties to productive use. The discussion was informational only, with no vote taken; the proposal is expected to return to a future committee meeting for further consideration.

Will County Land Bank Key Points:

  • Pryor’s proposal would create a single-purpose entity through intergovernmental agreement under the Illinois Land Bank Act, with no request for county operating subsidy or new staff.
  • Land banks already operate in Cook, Lake, DuPage and Kankakee counties, along with several regional partnerships in northern Illinois.
  • Several executive committee members raised detailed concerns about board structure, institutional-investor participation and the loss of county control over distressed property.
  • The proposal will return to the executive committee, with member Julie Berkowicz suggesting it warrants a committee-of-the-whole discussion.

WILL COUNTY — The Will County Board Executive Committee on Thursday, May 14, 2026, opened an initial discussion on whether to establish a Will County land bank to acquire and reposition distressed, vacant, abandoned and tax-delinquent properties around the county. The presentation, identified on the agenda as item 26-4802, was led by Doug Pryor of the Will County Center for Economic Development and required no vote.

Pryor told members a land bank is a public or not-for-profit entity narrowly focused on returning problem properties to productive ownership rather than holding land long-term. “These aren’t eminent domain vehicles,” he said. “They’re not going and taking properties. Rather, they are properties that are already abandoned.” Under the Illinois Land Bank Act, such entities are typically structured as intergovernmental agreements with a not-for-profit operator, with board representation drawn from both public and private stakeholders.

The proposal carries no request for an operating subsidy or a new county department, Pryor said. Instead, the county would adopt an enabling ordinance, coordinate tax foreclosure and extinguishment processes, and provide oversight and governance representation. Individual municipalities would decide for themselves whether to participate through separate intergovernmental agreements with the land bank.

Pryor noted that the county currently averages slightly fewer than 3,000 tax sales each year, but that the existing tax sale tool moves properties immediately to auction without offering a strategic redevelopment pathway. Land banks, he said, address fragmented ownership, tax and title complications and limited municipal capacity to redevelop distressed areas. Comparable programs already exist in Cook, Lake and DuPage counties, as well as in Kankakee and northern Illinois.

David Oxley said Will County had operated a similar program several years ago through the Land Use Department under former administrator Tim Mack, focused on rehabilitating foreclosed homes in distressed neighborhoods. Traynere, the chair of the ad hoc Ordinance Review Committee, said she had reviewed similar materials recently and supports moving forward, while noting she wanted to understand how investors and grant funding could support the program without a direct county appropriation.

District 10 member Julie Berkowicz pressed Pryor on the structure of the governing board, including who would sit on it and whether institutional investors might participate. “Our neighborhoods today and for the last 25 years have been struggling with the impact of institutional ownership in our subdivisions,” Berkowicz said. Pryor responded that the structure would be defined in the enabling ordinance and intergovernmental agreement and would be brought before the board for review and a future vote. “Like at the end of the day, it’s not designed to serve large industrial or large capital investors,” he said. “It’s designed to have local regional experts.”

Berkowicz suggested the matter warrants a committee-of-the-whole discussion when it returns for action, and asked that staff provide copies of enabling agreements from neighboring counties for board review. Mica Freeman, who chairs the Capital Improvements and Information Technology Committee, said she could think of several properties in her district that might benefit and pledged to keep watching the proposal as it advances. Pryor said no formal vote was being sought at this meeting and that staff intends to bring a draft enabling ordinance and intergovernmental agreement back to the committee at a future date.

Manhattan Weather Full forecast →
Today Jun 3
Mostly Sunny
86° 65°

Mostly Sunny

💨 10 to 15 mph 💧 0%

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

WCO-PZ-July-15

Green Garden Landscaping Business Gains Permit Amid Strong Neighbor Support

A small landscaping and lawn maintenance business operating on a residential property in Green Garden Township received official approval Tuesday after neighbors voiced overwhelming support for the operation. The Will...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Briefs: Will County Planning and Zoning Commission for July 15, 2025

Frankfort Shed Relocation Approved: A homeowner on West Harvest Drive in Frankfort Township received a variance to reduce an east side-yard setback from 10 to 4 feet. The variance, sought by...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Briefs: Manhattan Village Board for July 15, 2025

New Planning Commissioner Appointed: Mayor Mike Adrieansen appointed Gwen Petrella to the Manhattan Planning and Zoning Commission. The Village Board unanimously authorized the appointment for a term ending May 1, 2026....
manhattan fire district graphic logo.1

Manhattan Fire District Re-evaluating New Station Plans After Bids Come in Over Budget

Article Summary: Construction bids for a new Manhattan Fire Protection District station have come in over the district's maximum price, forcing officials to re-evaluate the project's scope. Chief Steve Malone...
Frankfort-Village-Board-Meeting-Graphic

Frankfort Approves ‘Whisk & Flame’ Culinary Studio, Slashes Parking Requirement for Downtown Property

An experiential culinary studio named Whisk & Flame is set to open in downtown Frankfort after the Village Board approved a series of special use permits and a significant parking...
Frankfort-Village-Board-Meeting-Graphic

Frankfort Village Board Adopts $59.4 Million Appropriation for Fiscal Year 2026

The Frankfort Village Board has formally set its maximum legal spending limit for the upcoming fiscal year, adopting a $59,366,900 appropriation ordinance for fiscal year 2026. The measure was passed...
Frankfort-Village-Board-Meeting-Graphic

Frankfort Establishes New Zoning Rules to Attract Data Centers

The Village of Frankfort has amended its zoning ordinance to create a specific use category for data centers, a move designed to regulate and attract high-tech development. The Village Board...
Frankfort-Village-Board-Meeting-Graphic

Currie Motors Expansion Gets Approval with Site Modifications

Currie Motors on Lincoln Highway received approval from the Frankfort Village Board on Monday for a major change to its site plan, allowing for the construction of seven new parking...
Frankfort-Village-Board-Meeting-Graphic

Frankfort Approves $134,531 Maintenance Contract for Wastewater Plant Filters

The Frankfort Village Board has approved a $134,531.17 agreement with Veolia Water Technologies, Inc. for critical preventative maintenance at the Regional Wastewater Treatment Plant. The contract is for the complete...
Frankfort-Village-Board-Meeting-Graphic

Meeting Briefs: Frankfort Village Board for July 14, 2025

'Whisk & Flame' Culinary Studio Approved: The board approved "Whisk & Flame," an experiential culinary studio, for 10-12 Elwood Street. The project includes four special use permits for entertainment, liquor sales,...
WCO-Exec-Cmte-July-10.1

County Approves School Resource Officer, Multi-Year Planning Requirements

Will County approved hiring an additional sheriff's deputy for a school resource officer position that will be fully funded by Summit Hill School District 161, while also passing new transparency...
WCO-Exec-Cmte-July-10.2

County Addresses Senior Tax Exemption Processing Error

A processing error that cost County Board member Julie Berkowicz $600 in senior tax exemptions has prompted discussions about improving verification systems for property tax breaks. Will County Chief Assessment...
Meeting Briefs

Executive Committee Meeting July 10 Meeting Briefs

Liquor License Expansion: The county approved increasing Class C1 liquor licenses from eight to nine to accommodate Lockport Gas and Food LLC at 14747 W. 159th Street in Homer Glen....
frankfort-park-district

Meeting Briefs: Frankfort Park District Board for June 10, 2025

The Frankfort Park District Board of Commissioners discussed a legal dispute with the Five Oaks homeowners association over park development rules at its Tuesday meeting. Executive Director Gina Hassett reported...
MH 114 SB July 9, 2025

Manhattan 114 Explores Fifth-Grade Athletics as New Superintendent Lays Out Vision

In his first official report to the Board of Education, new Manhattan School District 114 Superintendent Dr. Damien Aherne outlined his initial priorities and introduced a significant proposal to expand...