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If your business is not allowed in that location, staff may help guide you to a more appropriate location or can alert you as to an appropriate approval process for that use.
In order to maintain available parking spots for downtown shoppers, there are designated parking areas for employee parking in the downtown. An employee parking permit may be obtained by contacting the Police Department, non-emergency line at 847-362-8310.
Parking Map- 30 grams, or just over one ounce of “flower”
- 5 grams of cannabis concentrate
- 500 milligrams of THC - the chemical that makes users high – in a cannabis infused product such as gummies, candy, other consumable products (referred to as “edibles”), or tinctures, and lotions
- On October 15, 2019, applications for up to 75 dispensaries will be made available. These new businesses will serve in addition to medical dispensaries that receive approval to serve adult consumers during the transition.
- On January 1, 2020, sales begin. January 7, 2020, applications for infusers, transporters, and a new category of cultivator called a craft grower will be published for business applicants.
- On May 1, 2020, new dispensaries licenses will be issued, and the state will begin a disparity and market study of the cannabis industry.
- On July 1, 2020, up to 40 craft grower and infuser licenses will be issued, along with an unlimited number of transporter licenses.
The Act allows for up to 47 dispensary licenses to be awarded within the “Chicago-Naperville-Elgin” region by May 1, 2020. The applications for such licenses shall be available by October 1. Once the disparity and market studies are complete, the state can issue additional licenses if needed. These licenses must take into account the findings of the disparity study.
Sales will be taxed at 10% for cannabis with THC levels at or less than 35%; 25% for cannabis with THC levels above 35%; and 20% for cannabis infused products such as edibles. This is in addition to standard state and local sales taxes. Additionally, municipalities may add a special tax of up to 3% and counties may add a special tax up to 3.75% in unincorporated areas.
The municipal cannabis sales tax will be collected and enforced by the Illinois Department of Revenue (IDR), which is entitled to retain 1.5% of the amount distributed to each municipality as an administrative fee.
While the Act presently would allow for the tax to be effective not sooner than September 1, 2020, the Illinois Municipal League (IML) recommends that municipalities consider adopting the tax ordinance imposing the tax effective on January 1, 2020, and certify the ordinance to the IDR by October 1, 2019, in anticipation of a legislative amendment to the Act that may authorize the local tax as of January 1, 2020.
Additional taxes will be collected by other government bodies including a cultivation privilege tax, cannabis purchaser excise tax, cannabis county retailers’ occupation tax. State tax revenue will be placed in the Cannabis Regulation Fund. The Department of Revenue projects that this industry will generate over $57 million in tax revenue and licensing fees in FY20.
Within the Act, distribution of government proceeds collected by the State associated with the sale of recreational cannabis was established as follows:
- 20% to State mental health services and substance abuse programs
- 10% to pay unpaid State bills
- 35% to the State General Revenue Fund
- 2% to public education and safety campaigns
- 8% to the Local Government Distributive Fund, for prevention and training for law enforcement
- 25% for identified social equity programs
- Arrest records between January 1, 2013 and effective date must be expunged by January 1, 2021
- Arrest records between January 1, 2000, and January 1, 2013, must be expunged by January 1, 2023
- Arrest records prior to January 1, 2000, must be expunged prior to January 1, 2025.
Without recycling (2x collection): 2.0 cy@2x/week=$80 per month
With recycling (1x collection): 2.0 cy@1x/week=$41 per month
ANNUAL POTENTIAL SAVINGS IS $468/year
Groot has been an industry leader in recycling and alternative fuels and has received numerous awards its environmental stewardship. Groot's fleet servicing Libertyville will consist of trucks powered by compressed natural gas (CNG).
In addition to providing commercial garbage and recycling services, Groot has committed to provide additional community resources including two (2) shredding events per year as well as an annual grant for recycling education.
For more information please contact Groot at (877) 40-GROOT (877-404-7668).
Fire Investigation Report: A fire investigation report is a comprehensive report composed by the Fire Prevention Bureau that may contain elements ranging from causes to interview transcripts. Owing to their extensive nature, fire investigation reports are typically not completed and available for distribution until over a month following the incident. As such, FOIA requests for a fire investigation report filed immediately following the incident will very likely not result in the fire investigation report being received, as it does not exist in its totality.
It would be recommended, then, to call Fire Station I (847-362-5664) approximately 6-8 weeks following the incident to inquire whether the fire investigation report has been completed. If it has been completed, provide your email address to receive the report electronically. The Department does not mail fire investigation reports.
Patient Care Report: As the Department is required to comply with HIPAA, please select one of the following options:
- If you were tended to by the Libertyville Fire Department and would like to receive your patient care report, please complete the Department's Patient Request for Access form. If you are the patient's Power of Attorney, it would be required to complete the Department's Request for Records form and complement the completed form with documentation listing you as such. Upon completion, call Fire Station I to acquire the email address of the personnel you should email your completed form and supporting documentation to.
- If you would like to obtain the patient care report of a deceased individual, provide the Department's Request for Records form and complement the completed form with documentation listing you as the Power of Attorney and/or the administrator of the estate.
- If you are from a law firm and would like to obtain your client's patient care report, complete the Department's Request for Records form and ensure the patient signs the form granting your firm permission to possess their patient care report. Then, call Fire Station I to acquire the email address of the personnel you should email your completed form to.
Please contact the Fire Prevention Bureau at (847) 362-5664, to inquire about the additional activities the fire department has to offer the Libertyville community.
Our Police Department is located at 200 E Cook Avenue.
Community Development Department and Public Works Administration are located at 325 N. Milwaukee, Suite 203.
Commonwealth Edison is the power utility in the Village of Libertyville. Power outages that do not involve an immediate threat to life or property should be reported via ComEd’s telephone reporting system at 1-800-EDISON1 (1-800-334-7661).
Please do not call 9-1-1 or the Police/Fire departments for general outage information. We often do not have any information on the outage, and these calls can detract from our ability to handle emergency calls promptly.
- If you smell smoke or see fire
- To get help for someone who is hurt
- If you see someone getting hurt
- If you see a crime in progress
- If you're not sure you have an emergency
When a Libertyville 9-1-1 Dispatcher receives a 9-1-1 call, they immediately know where the call was placed from. In addition, the call can quickly be transferred to any nearby public safety agency. If the call is reporting a medical emergency, the dispatcher can give pre-arrival instructions over the phone.
For non-emergency calls, please dial our business number, 847-362-8310.
- We will ask you what happened and where did the crime occur.
- We will ask you if anyone is injured, and if the injured person is in the same location.
- If the injured person is at a different address we will want to know where they are.
- We will ask you if you know the people involved in the incident.
- We will ask you if there are weapons involved.
- We will ask you for a full description of the people involved in the incident.
- We will ask you for associated vehicle descriptions.
- We may ask you to stay on the phone with us until officers arrive.
- We will ask you if you want to remain anonymous.
Also, please realize that the dispatchers are trained to perform many tasks at once, and will often be dispatching emergency response units while they are talking to you. If they ask you to hold, it is because they are DISPATCHING HELP TO YOU. We immediately dispatch the appropriate emergency response for your problem along with 1 or 2 police officers.
- All calls to 9-1-1 made from cellular phones are currently routed to the closest 9-1-1 PSAP. They will assess the incident and if warranted, will transfer the caller to the local police or fire department that has jurisdiction over the incident being reported.
- Depending on the technology of your phone, the Dispatcher may receive the cellular phone number, the tower location, and possibly the GPS coordinates of the phone.
If the call gets disconnected before the dispatcher is able to obtain this information, we will attempt to call you back to continue to obtain information.
- The dispatcher will try to re-contact you.
- If the phone line is busy, they will instruct an operator to break in on your conversation and request that you release the line for an emergency phone call.
- If the dispatcher cannot re-establish contact, you will have company stopping in. It is our policy to send police officers when a 9-1-1 caller hangs up, and we cannot re-contact the caller.
Our Consolidated 9-1-1 system is also set up to provide for people who speak foreign languages. We have a direct line to AT&T Language Line personnel that can interpret the callers need for help. This is available 24 hours a day 7 days a week.
The most common causes of high bills are leaky toilets, humidifiers, and water softeners. Most water meters have leak detectors on the face of the meter. If all your water is shut off sink, bathtub, washing machine, sprinkler, etc and the leak detector is still spinning, you have a leak. Reading your meter at night and in the morning for a few days to see if any anomalies show up can be helpful.
To check your toilet to see if it is leaking remove the tank cover and see if the water is overflowing into the fill tube after the toilet has finished filling; adjusting the float can solve this. It also may be the seal at the bottom of the tank. If you run your finger under the seal and it comes out black, the seal is deteriorating and needs to be replaced. Sometimes the handle mechanism gets hung up and keeps the handle down until you jiggle it. Dye tablets are available at the Village Hall and 600 North Avenue for testing toilets.
Our water technicians are available to assist our residents. If you would like to schedule an appointment, please call (847) 362-3434 between 7:00 am – 3:30 pm Monday – Friday. There is no charge for this service. If would like to have your meter tested the Village will send it out for testing. If the meter is reading properly your water account will be charged an additional $50 for a regular household meter; no charges will be applied to your account if the meter is found to be faulty.
If it smells like burning plastic the problem is your water heater. Water heaters have plastic dip tubes that break down with age and start to clog your aerators and appliances.
If you have had any recent plumbing work done gently make sure the valves are open all the way. If this does not help please call (847) 362-3434 between 7:00 am – 3:30 pm Monday – Friday and we will have someone check further.
Groot Industries, for questions please call, (800) 244-1977.
SWALCOAsphalt - 6” – 8” of gravel under 3” asphalt --- 1 ½” roll, 1 ½” roll
Brick pavers – sand over compacted gravel.
No rebar in apron portion of driveway (to difficult for emergency access)
The most common causes of high bills are leaky toilets, humidifiers, and water softeners. Most water meters have leak detectors on the face of the meter. If all your water is shut off at the sink, bathtub, washing machine, sprinkler, etc and the leak detector is still spinning, you have a leak. Reading your meter at night and in the morning for a few days to see if any anomalies show up can be helpful.
To check your toilet to see if it is leaking remove the tank cover and see if the water is overflowing into the fill tube after the toilet has finished filling; adjusting the float can solve this. It also may be the seal at the bottom of the tank if you run you finger under the seal and if comes out black the seal is deteriorating and needs to be replaced. Sometimes the handle mechanism gets hung up and holds the handle down until you jiggle it. Dye tablets are available at the Village Hall and 600 North Avenue for testing toilets.
Our water technicians are available to assist our residents. If you would like to schedule an appointment, please call 847-362-3434 between 7:00 am – 3:30 pm Monday – Friday. There is no charge for this service. If you would like to have your meter tested the Village will send it out for testing. If the meter is reading properly your water account will be charged an additional $50 for a regular household meter; no charges will be applied to your account if the meter is found to be faulty.
If it smells like burning plastic the problem is your water heater. Water heaters have plastic dip tubes that break down with age and start to clog your aerators and appliances.
If you have had any recent plumbing work done gently make sure the valves are open all the way. If this does not help please call (847) 362-3434 between 7:00 am – 3:30 pm Monday – Friday and we will have someone check further.




