D122 Renews Insurance Policies for Nearly $490,000
The New Lenox School District 122 Board of Education has renewed its property/casualty and worker’s compensation insurance policies for the 2025-2026 school year, with total costs amounting to nearly $490,000.
The board approved both renewals with the Collective Liability Insurance Cooperative (CLIC), a group of hundreds of Illinois school districts that pool resources to purchase insurance coverage at affordable rates. The upcoming school year will mark the district’s third year as a member of the cooperative.
The property and casualty insurance renewal comes at a total cost of $353,358. This policy covers the district’s buildings, property, and various forms of liability.
The worker’s compensation insurance policy was renewed for a total cost of $133,731. According to a pricing comparison sheet from CLIC, this represents a 1.6% decrease from the previous year’s cost of $135,873. The reduction is partly due to a 2.3% decrease in the modified premium, despite a 3.5% increase in the district’s total payroll.
Business Manager Robert Groos presented both renewals to the board. The measures were approved unanimously as part of the consent agenda, following a motion by board member Bill Pender and a second by Vice President David Rush.
–
Latest News Stories
House Dems pass redistricting amendment GOP says will lead to more gerrymandering
TCS exclusive leads to revised legal arguments in income tax referendum lawsuit
Republican lawmakers press Trump trade rep on tariff relief
WATCH: WA GOP leader calls AG’s income tax emails ‘certainly improper’
WAGOP calls on justice to recuse herself in income tax ruling over alleged conflict
Georgia candidates mourn Scott, celebrate accomplishments
Congress considers national citizen-only voting amendment
Fragile ceasefire with Iran being tested
Faith leaders urge SEC to expand retirement options for nonprofit workers
Trump attacks Supreme Court over tariffs, frets about birthright case
Senate Democrats vow to make budget resolution vote painful for Republicans
Lawmakers question Omar’s role in fraud scandal as she skips hearing