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The Springfield City Council meeting started with a wonky but important question: who really sets the city’s legislative agenda, and what happens to future tax revenue when other taxing bodies get involved? Ward 3 Ald. Roy Williams pushed hard for the full council to weigh in before anything moves forward, warning about millions in lost revenue.

Things heated up even more over a police technology contract, when a resident argued that growing surveillance tools — cameras, phone hacking, real-time information centers — aren’t making people safer, just more watched, and urged the council to invest in community supports instead.

Then the room split. A longtime resident and former law enforcement officer blasted some council members and speakers for “disrespect,” defended the police and the chief, and accused a few on the council of playing politics and ignoring public safety.

Ward 6 Ald. Jennifer Notariano immediately pushed back, calling out what she described as a culture in the Police Department that resists oversight, insisting that council members have a duty to question city staff at every level, and recounting a past meeting where officers allegedly laughed as the same resident insulted her from the audience.

From there, the chamber got so chaotic that the mayor had to abruptly move straight to a motion to adjourn.

If you care about how Springfield handles tax policy, police oversight, and public safety priorities, this one is worth watching all the way through.

Zach Adams is the digital media coordinator for Illinois Times and Springfield Business Journal, handling photography, videography and digital content. He is also the owner of 1221 Photography.

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