Resident Alleges Financial Mismanagement, Underused Buildings at Peotone Board Meeting
A Peotone resident and village trustee, Jim Bowden, confronted the Peotone School District 207-U Board of Education during its special meeting Monday with a series of sharp allegations regarding building vacancies, uncollected student fees, and misuse of district purchasing cards.
Speaking during the public comment period, Bowden claimed that Peotone Intermediate Center (PIC) and Peotone Elementary School (PES) would be 50% and 45% vacant, respectively, in the coming school year. He urged the board to transfer all students from the non-air-conditioned PIC to the newly renovated PES, which he said would provide a more comfortable learning environment and still leave the elementary school 18% vacant.
Bowden also alleged the district has failed to collect nearly a quarter of a million dollars in outstanding student fees. Citing a 68% increase in unpaid fees in the 2023-24 school year and a 57% increase in 2024-25, he accused the district of having an “unfair system” and called for other parents to protest by withholding their own fee payments until the district sends delinquent accounts to a collection agency.
His final accusation concerned the alleged abuse of district P-Cards, or purchasing cards. Bowden claimed a board member had previously questioned $25,000 spent in a single month when individual cardholders have a $1,000 monthly limit. He asserted that the district’s business manager acknowledged policies were not being followed and blamed the administration and school board for a lack of enforcement.
The board did not publicly respond to Bowden’s allegations, as is standard practice for public comment.
Latest News Stories
Trump defunds California sex ed program over ‘gender ideology’
WATCH: Illinois In Focus Daily | Thursday Aug. 21st, 2025
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Peotone Board of Education for August 18, 2025
Acting, Consulting Superintendents to Lead Peotone Schools During Owens’ Absence
Texas House passes Congressional redistricting bill after absconding Dems return
Department of Education ends support for political activism
Lincoln-Way Board Reviews $162 Million Tentative Budget, Projects Deficit Due to Bus Purchase Timing
Illinois trucker warns foreign firms faking logs, dodging rules, risking safety
Illinois law mandates pharmacies to sell needles, sparking safety debate
Report warns U.S. national debt predicted to pass $53 trillion by 2035
Courts remain firm against unsealing grand jury records from Epstein trial
White House TikTok garners 1.3 million views in 24 hours