Will County Finance Logo

Will County Committee Advances $75,000 for U of I Extension

Spread the love

Will County Board Finance Committee Meeting | June 2, 2026

Article Summary: The Will County Board Finance Committee on Tuesday, June 2, 2026, voted to advance a resolution committing $75,000 to the University of Illinois Extension’s Will County operations, continuing the county’s long-running support for the educational and youth-development organization.

U of I Extension Funding Key Points:

  • The resolution commits $75,000 — $50,000 from a landfill host fee and $25,000 from subgrant awards.
  • Two Extension educators presented; the unit’s county director was unavailable.
  • Members said the funding matches prior years’ support, and one trustee said she wished the county could give more.
  • The motion passed on a voice vote and now moves to the full County Board.

WILL COUNTY — The Will County Board Finance Committee on Tuesday, June 2, 2026, voted to advance a resolution committing $75,000 to support University of Illinois Extension programming in Will County, an allocation that members described as consistent with past years’ funding.

According to the resolution, the $75,000 would be drawn from two sources: $50,000 from the Landfill Host Fee account, funded through the county’s Laraway Road Host Fee Agreement with Waste Management, and $25,000 from a subgrant awards and obligations line. The resolution ties the funding to countywide educational services in agriculture, community resource development, 4-H and youth programming, home economics and horticulture.

Two Extension staff members presented in place of the unit’s county director, who was unavailable. A horticulture educator and a 4-H youth development educator answered questions from the committee about the organization’s work and the value of the county’s contribution. (The educators’ names could not be verified from the supporting documents and are flagged below.)

Committee member Jacqueline Traynere offered immediate support, saying she has been on the board long enough to understand the program’s value and that she wished the county could provide more. Member Julie Berkowicz asked whether the request matched the prior year’s award; the presenters confirmed the request was for the same amount as in past years and said the dollars are stretched substantially through volunteer labor, describing a return of roughly nine times each dollar contributed.

Background materials submitted with the request detail the scope of the Will County operation. Extension reported reaching more than 11,100 county participants in 2025-26, answering more than 2,000 gardening and horticulture questions, and — across its three-county territory of Grundy, Kankakee and Will — counting more than $353,772 in volunteer service value. The materials also note that recent federal funding changes ended the statewide SNAP-Ed nutrition program, which had supported two federally funded positions housed in Will County, prompting Extension to shift to a Health and Community Wellness educator-and-advisor model. The organization stated that locally raised funds, including county allocations, are eligible for a 75% state match under the County Cooperative Extension Law.

The motion to advance the resolution was made by member Denise Winfrey and seconded by Traynere, and carried on a voice vote. As a committee recommendation, the commitment now moves to the full Will County Board.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

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...
Federal $1.68B loan aims to lower Michigan energy costs, improve infrastructure

Federal $1.68B loan aims to lower Michigan energy costs, improve infrastructure

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square The Trump administration has approved a $1.68 billion loan for DTE, saying the funding will help modernize the utility's natural gas infrastructure and lower energy...
Illinois Quick Hits: Rockford to fill budget gap with reserve funds

Illinois Quick Hits: Rockford to fill budget gap with reserve funds

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Rockford officials are planning to spend reserve funds to close a $9.4 million revenue shortfall. The Rockford...
Gas and fuel costs concern over 75% of voters, poll finds

Gas and fuel costs concern over 75% of voters, poll finds

By Alton WallaceThe Center Square More than three-quarters of American voters say high gas and fuel prices have dealt a direct blow to their household finances, according to a new...
Feds seek to join case to halt Evanston black ‘reparations’ payments

Feds seek to join case to halt Evanston black ‘reparations’ payments

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square The Justice Department is jumping into court against the city of Evanston, lending the heft of the federal government to a lawsuit...
Mexican human smuggling rings busted nationwide

Mexican human smuggling rings busted nationwide

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Mexican-based human smuggling rings have been busted in multiple states. One involved smuggling hundreds of people from Central America, Africa and the Middle East into...
Trump-backed Moore leads Alabama Senate runoff

Trump-backed Moore leads Alabama Senate runoff

By Caroline BodaThe Center Square U.S. Rep. Barry Moore, R-Ala., is projected to become the Republican nominee for U.S. Senate in Alabama, setting him up to succeed retiring Tommy Tuberville...
Hern projected to win Oklahoma GOP Senate primary

Hern projected to win Oklahoma GOP Senate primary

By Caroline BodaThe Center Square U.S. Rep. Kevin Hern, R-Okla., is projected to win the Republican nomination for Oklahoma’s U.S. Senate seat in an effort to succeed recently installed Homeland...
Pan criticizes Kiley as California congressional race heats up

Pan criticizes Kiley as California congressional race heats up

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square The race for California’s Congressional District 6 is a “priority race” for Democrats. That is according to Dr. Richard Pan, the Democrat who appears headed...
U.S. Department of Justice investigates Newsom's associates

U.S. Department of Justice investigates Newsom’s associates

By Liam HibbertThe Center Square The U.S. Department of Justice has been investigating people close to California Gov. Gavin Newsom over the past year for reasons that have not been...
G7 puts out statement on pursuing more private, ‘mutually beneficial’ international development

G7 puts out statement on pursuing more private, ‘mutually beneficial’ international development

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square Leading industrialized nations issued a statement on the second day of the G7 summit calling for international development partnerships to be "mutually beneficial," language that...
Advocates say price transparency alone won’t fix healthcare prices

Advocates say price transparency alone won’t fix healthcare prices

By Tom JoyceThe Center Square Letting patients see hospital prices can help, but it will not fix the high cost of health care by itself. That's what witnesses told members...
Social media platforms challenge Chicago tax; Pritzker confident in statewide plan

Social media platforms challenge Chicago tax; Pritzker confident in statewide plan

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Chicago faces an ongoing lawsuit over a tax ordinance on social media platforms that was imposed four...
Feds move education programs to other agencies

Feds move education programs to other agencies

By Esther WickhamThe Center Square The Trump administration announced Tuesday it is moving civil rights and special education programs to other federal agencies in efforts to continue the dismantling of...