ORLAND
PARK
EXPOSED
From a Dutch farming village to a $271 million debt trap — the complete political history of how one family ran the same playbook 50 years apart
Watch Orland Park
Devour the Prairie
Every annexed acre required a trustee vote. Every trustee vote was an opportunity.
Population Explosion
260% growth in the 1970s — the Doogan/Pekau/Frantz decade
Every Permit
A Transaction
Millions through George Brown's office. Every approval a vote on who gets a break.
The Farm Town
In 1892, Orland Park was incorporated as a village of a few hundred souls on the southwestern edge of Cook County — flat, quiet, Dutch and German farming families who had settled the High Prairie generations before. The Rafacz family tended their sod farm at 151st and LaGrange Road. The O'Malley family would later plant a country club on Southwest Highway. Carl Sandburg's name would eventually grace the first high school, but in 1892 there was no high school — there was barely a village.
The school tells the story of everything that followed. Carl Sandburg High School opened September 1954, designed for 450 students at a cost of $930,000. Carl Sandburg himself attended the dedication on October 10, 1954. By 1958 enrollment had exploded to over 900 — the "Million Dollar Annex" was already under construction. The community was growing faster than anyone had planned for, and the men who controlled the infrastructure of that growth were about to take power.
The Doogan
Machine · 20 Years
Melvin Doogan took the village presidency in 1965 and would not leave until 1985. Twenty years. Through the entire suburban explosion — 3,500 to nearly 30,000 residents, 2.5 square miles to 22. The critical infrastructure of power was already in place: the village controlled sewers, water connections, building permits, and zoning. Every developer who wanted to build anywhere near Orland Park had to work through the same small group of men.
The 1969 election installed the full machine. Doogan re-elected. Roger Frantz confirmed as the board's designated "liaison between village and annexations." And a crucial new face: Donald Pekau Sr., fresh off a term on the Village Zoning Board of Appeals, won his first trustee seat. He would be re-elected in 1971 on a 4-year term. His son Keith would become mayor 48 years later and run the same play.
The mechanism was elegant in its simplicity. Every developer needed: a zoning change — Pekau Sr. had sat on the Zoning Board. An annexation vote — Frantz controlled that as "liaison." A sewer permit — village-issued. A water connection — village-issued. A building permit — Building Commissioner George Brown. Any one of these could be delayed indefinitely or rushed through in a week. The trustees chose.
In June 1975 alone: 75 building permits, total value $1,013,730. In a single month. Every dollar flowing through the same approval machine. The builders who cooperated got fast approvals. The ones who didn't got delays. The ones who couldn't afford delays found their competitors going to Orland Park instead. As one speaker told a public meeting in a neighboring town: "We're chasing builders out of town. They're going to Orland Park."
| Year | President | Key Trustees | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1968 | Ken Fulton | Eldon Miller, Joseph McCarthy, Walter Kukla, Al Brandau, John Dunn · Clerk: Frank Jeffords | S.Star Mar 21, 1968 |
| 1969 | Melvin Doogan | Roger Frantz, Robert Bibeau (4yr) · Elston Oranger, Eldon Shimek, Donald Pekau Sr. (2yr) · Clerk: Jon R. Anderson | Tribune Apr 16, 1969 |
| 1971 | Melvin Doogan | Eldon Shimek, Donald Pekau Sr., John Barker, Harold Uthe (4yr) · Clerk: Gene Bates | Suburbanite Apr 18, 1971 |
| 1973 | Melvin Doogan | Barker, Bibeau, Frantz, Pekau, Uthe, Barbee, Granat | Southtown Star Sep 5, 1973 |
| 1975 | Melvin Doogan · PRO Party | Donald Pekau, Jon Anderson, William Stroh, Herbert Walker, Dolores Zabinski | Star/Tribune Apr 13, 1975 |
| 1977 | Melvin Doogan | *Roger Frantz, *Joseph Cistaro (incumbents) · John A. Wilson Jr., Ralph Sellman (new) · Clerk: *Anne M. Limanowski | Tribune Apr 20, 1977 |
| 1979 | Melvin Doogan | Roger Frantz, William Stroh, Ralph Sellman, John A. Wilson Jr., Frederick Owens (future 10th mayor) | S.Star Aug 19, 1979 |
| 1981 | Melvin Doogan | Owens challenges Doogan for president — LOSES. Doogan backs Ciccone, Vogel, Trainauskas. | S.Star Apr 23, 1981 |
| 1983 | Melvin Doogan | April 12, 1983: Voters adopt council-manager form 2,415–2,056. McLaughlin elected trustee. | S.Star Apr 21, 1983 |
"Trustee Roger Frantz said he had an informal meeting with the developers last Thursday where they discussed the economic feasibility to the owners of bringing both parcels into Orland."Southtown Star, April 10, 1974, Page 2 — on Frantz's private meeting with O'Malley family developers · newspapers.com/image/537448617
"We can delay anything we want."Village official Pressler · Suburbanite Economist, August 23, 1972, Page 56 · newspapers.com/image/55157524
Government by Men,
Not by Law
"A Law That Doesn't Always Apply"
The village fathers spent about 10 years and at least $15,000 preparing a Comprehensive Zoning Ordinance. In May 1975, it passed. The planning commission chairman pledged it would be followed "to the letter." Within months it was being ignored for friends of the board.
THE GIDLUND CASE: Summer 1975 — builder Gidlund's permit was revoked after officials discovered it violated the new zoning ordinance. He filed suit: Gidlund vs. Orland Park — still pending December 1975. The village enforced the law strictly against the outsider.
THE ORLAND STATE BANK EXCEPTION: At the same time, Orland State Bank — "a mainstay of the Orland Park business community" — built a drive-in facility without the required special use permit. The village fathers knew. They looked the other way.
THE ADMISSION: After the bank affair came to light, a village trustee and the village attorney revealed "the larger dimensions of the situation." The leeway given the bank was not "favoritism," they said — because the ordinance "has been ignored in other cases too, when village officials feel someone deserves a 'break.'"
"A curious system of government by men, not by law, has come to light in Orland Park... The situation mocks justice."
Donald Pekau Sr. — The Exit
- First elected trustee: April 15, 1969 (2-year term)
- Re-elected: April 20, 1971 (4-year term)
- On Zoning Board of Appeals BEFORE first election
- Part of PRO party ("People Responsible to Orland") 1975
- November 1975: Called BOTH "ex-trustee" AND "still on board" in same article
- December 1975: Zoning scandal breaks publicly
- Keith Pekau publicly states father was "voted out because of growth and Orland Square"
- The record shows he departed as the scandal broke
The Federal Parallel — Kaufman & Broad
- Same era, same pattern: builders + trustees + private meetings + campaign money + favorable zoning
- Kaufman & Broad Inc. — the nation's largest homebuilder — federally fined for bribing mayors and trustees in Hoffman Estates, Illinois
- Federal crime in Hoffman Estates. Local scandal in Orland Park. Same decade. Same suburbs.
- Source: New York Times, November 10, 1973
The Mall Opens.
The Machine Ends.
July 28, 1976: Orland Square Mall opened on the former Rafacz sod farm. Marshall Field's and Sears anchored 103 acres. By 1978, annual sales exceeded $100 million — "years ahead of predictions." In 1970, Orland Park had zero commercial space. The trustees who voted yes on the Rafacz annexation in 1971 had just created the anchor for what would eventually become 2.4 million square feet of retail.
Melvin Doogan left office in 1985 after 20 years. Frederick T. Owens succeeded him — a schoolteacher from Chicago who had moved to Orland Park in 1972, founded homeowners' organizations, challenged Doogan in 1981 and lost, ran again in 1985 and won. Owens brought Lake Michigan water to the village, pioneered the happy hour ban, professionalized village government. He died in office May 3, 1992 at Palos Community Hospital. Village Hall was named for him in 1993. Keith Pekau would remove that name from the sign in February 2024.
White Flight Built
Orland Park
Roseland collapses — 1958–1975
Dutch community founded 1840s. Lasted 125 years. Blockbusting agents move Black families onto blocks in 1964, trigger panic selling. "When the four CRC congregations packed up church and school to move south and west... [it happened] in a matter of a few months." By 1980 census: 97% Black. Source: Chicago Gang History · Reformed Journal Aug 2022 · Mark T. Mulder, "Shades of White Flight," Rutgers 2015
Inner-ring suburbs absorb first wave — 1965–1978
Families move southwest to Calumet Park village, Blue Island, Beverly, Calumet Heights. Calumet Park: 99.6% white in 1960, only 12 Black families as late as 1975. "Most of the Christian families moved West and Southwest." — Ray Hanania, Suburban Chicagoland 2018, describing his own 1968–69 experience.
Inner-ring suburbs transition — 1975–1992
Same blockbusting pattern reaches Calumet Park village. Virtually all white 1975 → 72% Black by 1992. Those families move again — further southwest. Source: Grokipedia Calumet Park · Wikipedia Calumet Park, Illinois
Final destination: Orland Park — the Catalina subdivision, Clearview, and the Dutch church
Catalina subdivision (west of Harlem, north of 159th): built 1970s–80s. Floor plans named Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Stanford, Oxford, Cornell, Dartmouth — aspirational naming for families leaving city bungalows. Clearview subdivision (north of 143rd, west of 82nd): 1970s. THE CHURCH SMOKING GUN: Orland Park Christian Reformed Church dedicated November 1971. December 1972: Second CRC of Roseland merges into it. By 1980: 210 families, 881 members. So many Roseland Dutch arrived they founded a daughter church in Tinley Park in 1979. Robert P. Swierenga (2003): "The Englewood and Roseland Dutch also went west as far as Palos Heights, Tinley Park, and Orland Park."
The McLaughlin Era
& The Triangle Begins
Dan McLaughlin first ran for village trustee in 1983 — the same day voters adopted the council-manager form of government. He served as trustee 1983–1991, then won his first mayoral election in 1993 after Frederick Owens died in office. McLaughlin would serve 24 years across six terms, until his stunning defeat by Keith Pekau in 2017.
His signature project and eventual millstone: the Main Street Triangle — nine acres of village-owned land northwest of LaGrange Road and 143rd Street near the Metra station. McLaughlin's vision: walkable downtown. The reality: decades of stalled development, $65M+ in debt for the Ninety7Fifty apartments, a parking garage, a University of Chicago Medicine facility — and 9 undeveloped acres that would become Keith Pekau's greatest opportunity, and greatest scandal.
In 2017, McLaughlin ran for an unprecedented seventh term. He had proposed boosting his own salary and pension in 2016 — the backlash opened a door. Keith Pekau, the son of Donald Pekau Sr., walked through it. Pekau won 6,492 to 5,475 (54%–46%). The machine was changing hands.
Downtown Vision
TIF district 2004. Village takes on $65M+ for apartments, parking garage, U of C Medicine. Framed as investment. Apartments sold for $50.5M. Remaining 9 acres: undeveloped.
"Economic Development Tool"
$10K/month consulting to campaign donor Edwards Realty. $33M TIF commitment. $87M total project. Developer recoups $70M. No collateral. Performance forgiveness = non-recourse gift. Debt: $67M → $90.67M → projected $251M.
"Glide Path to $271M"
October 22, 2025: Dodge board eliminates Triangle TIF. Releases $2.5M to schools. Reconsidering all Edwards commitments. PMA consultants: $90.67M → $251M by 2027.
Father and Son
The Complete Pekau Corruption Record 2012–2025
2012 Bid Rigging: Pekau's landscaping company Groundskeeper amended bids after seeing competitor pricing — paid at original higher prices. Pattern described as "a department-wide joke" by village staff.
2017 Salary: Campaigned against $150,000 salary. Took full amount. Collected $600,000 in first term.
2017–19 Horton Insurance: Pekau firm paid ~$25,000 by Horton. Horton donated $13,000 to campaigns. Steered no-bid contract to Horton. Village paid Horton $4.5 million.
2017–21 Klein Thorpe Jenkins: KTJ donated $22,000. Village paid KTJ $3M+. KTJ fought two losing lawsuits costing $70,000+.
January 2019: Village Manager La Margo hired Jones Day to investigate Pekau. Pekau forced La Margo out after investigation launched. Promoted replacement after he cleared Pekau.
May 2019: While under investigation — REPEALED ethics rules requiring conflict disclosure and banning gift acceptance.
2020 COVID: Orland Park had 5th highest COVID death rate among Cook County municipalities over 40,000. Wasted $70,000 on lawsuit judge called "negligible likelihood of success."
February 2024: Removed Frederick T. Owens' name from Village Hall sign — in place since 1993. 600+ petition signatures in 4 days. Put sign at rear of building "where no one will see it."
August 2025: Published sensitive village litigation documents on blog after election loss. Cook County Judge Kate Moreland issued restraining order. "I will not be silenced."
The $33 Million
Giveaway
No collateral. No fixed repayment. Performance forgiveness clauses that turn a "loan" into a gift. The public never knew the debt was already $90 million and headed to $251 million.
What the Public Was Never Told
Told: The village is committing $33 million to develop the Main Street Triangle. It will use Tax Increment Financing — "an economic development tool that uses its own money to fund it." (Pekau, public hearing)
NOT told: The agreement is structured as non-recourse debt. The village holds no lien, no secondary security position, no corporate guarantee from Edwards Realty. The "repayment" is contingent on excess TIF revenue that TIF districts rarely produce. The milestones that trigger "forgiveness" of the public investment are designed to be met. If Edwards defaults, taxpayers have no recovery mechanism. The $33 million is gone.
NOT told: Village debt had grown from $67 million (when Pekau took office) to $90.67 million. His full plans would add $160 million more: $92M in TIF-related debt alone. Projected total: $251 million by 2027. He delayed releasing these numbers until AFTER the April 1, 2025 election.
NOT told: The project proceeded without required environmental filings. Any soil or groundwater contamination liability shifts back to the public.
The Vote That Committed
$33 Million
Projected village debt by end of 2027 under the full Pekau plan. Revealed by PMA Securities July 2025. The number Pekau delayed releasing until after the election.
Pekau took office 2019
Pekau lost 2025
not executed
from schools via TIF
per Dodge admin
Full Interactive
Timeline
Click any event to see the primary source document
"A curious system of government by men, not by law, has come to light in Orland Park... The situation mocks justice."
Tinley Park Star/Tribune · December 21, 1975 · Page 12"I will not be silenced."
Keith Pekau · August 2025 · After court restraining order
Father and Son.
Fifty Years.
One Playbook.
Compiled by Michael F. Henry · orlandmfh@gmail.com · Palos Park, Illinois · May 2026
Published at IllinoisSchoolDistrictAudit.com