The Cook County Board of Review is an independent office created by statute by the Illinois General Assembly and is governed by three commissioners who are elected by district for two- or four-year terms. Cook County, which includes Chicago, is the United States' second-most populous county (after Los Angeles County, California) with a population of 5.2 million residents. The Cook County Board of Review holds quasi-judicial powers to adjudicate taxpayer complaints or recommend exempt status of real property.

History

The board had been first created after the task of hearing tax appeals was transferred from the Cook County Board of Commissioners to a three-member board of review. The Revenue Act of 1939 converted this appeals system into a two member Cook County Board of Appeals. Both members were elected in a single at-large election held quadrennially.[citation needed] It remained this way until 1998. In 1996, the Illinois Legislature successfully passed Public Act 89-671, which made it so that, in 1998, the Cook County Board of Appeals would be renamed Cook County Board of Review and be reconstituted as a three-member body.

Responsibilities

The board of review allows residential and commercial property owners to contest an assessment made by the Cook County assessor that they believe incorrect or unjust. The Cook County Board of Review is vested with quasi-judicial powers to adjudicate taxpayer complaints or recommend exempt status of real property, which includes: residential, commercial, industrial, condominium property, and vacant land. There are approximately 1.8 million parcels of property in Cook County. The Board of Review adjudicated 422,713 parcel appeals in the 2012 assessment year.

Elections

1939–1994

After the Revenue Act of 1939 recreated the appeals board as the two-member Cook County Board of Appeals, its two members were elected in a single at-large election held quadrennially.

Regularly scheduled elections included:

Special elections included:

Since 1998

Since 1998 (when the board was recreated as a three-member body), members have been elected by district.

The Cook County Board of Review has its three seats rotate the length of terms. In a staggered fashion (in which no two seats have coinciding two-year terms), the seats rotate between two consecutive four-year terms and a two-year term.

The following table indicates whether a seat was/will be up for election in a given year:

Seats up for election by year (through 2036)
YearDistrict
1st2nd3rd
1998ElectionElectionElection
2002ElectionElectionElection
2004No electionNo electionElection
2006ElectionElectionNo election
2008No electionElectionElection
2010ElectionNo electionNo election
2012ElectionElectionElection
2014No electionNo electionElection
2016ElectionElectionNo election
2018No electionElectionElection
2020ElectionNo electionNo election
2022ElectionElectionElection
2024No electionNo electionElection
2026ElectionElectionNo election
2028No electionElectionElection
2030ElectionNo electionNo election
2032ElectionElectionElection
2034No electionNo electionElection
2036ElectionElectionNo election

Composition

AffiliationMembers
Democratic Party3
Republican Party0
Total3

Commissioners

Current

This is a list of the Cook County Board of Review Commissioners in order by district. This list is current as of December 2022[update]:

DistrictCommissionerIn office sinceParty
1George A. Cardenas2022Democratic
2Samantha Steele2022Democratic
3Larry Rogers, Jr.2004Democratic

Past iterations

Individuals who served on the original three-member Cook County Board of Review included Patrick Nash.

Individuals who served on the two-member Cook County Board of Appeals included Joseph Berrios, Wilson Frost, Pat Quinn, and Harry H. Semrow.

Members of the Cook County Board of Review (1998–present)

First district

  • Maureen Murphy (Republican): December 1998 – December 2006
  • Brendan Houlihan (Democrat): December 2006 – December 2010
  • Dan Patlak (Republican): December 2010 – December 2020
  • Tammy Wendt (Democrat): December 2020 – December 2022
  • George Cardenas (Democrat): December 2022 – present

Second district

Third district

See also

External links

  • official government website