Lyons’ new finance director Ryan Horne (right) talks with Trustee Dan Hilker during the April 19 meeting of the village board’s finance committee. (Photo by Steve Metsch) 

Lyons’ new finance director Ryan Horne (right) talks with Trustee Dan Hilker during the April 19 meeting of the village board’s finance committee. (Photo by Steve Metsch) 

Lyons’ new finance director eager to get to work

Spread the love

By Steve Metsch

Ryan Horne loves working with numbers and helping people.

So, it’s no surprise he considers his new job the perfect fit.

Horne, 52, of Glenview, started work as Lyons’ new finance director on April 18.

The next day found him attending meetings of the village board and its finance committee.

Horne formerly worked in the finance departments of Morton Grove and Lake County along with several businesses.

He was itching to return to public service and said his wife Mindy saw an ad in February for the finance director’s job in Lyons.

“She said, ‘Here’s a nice small community, in your wheelhouse.’ I wanted to get back to being a finance director. That’s what I love doing,” Horne said.

He said he “missed the closeness with the community.”

“That’s something you don’t get at a high level of county government,” he said.

Contact with residents is important to him.

“I always think, ‘How would I want someone to treat my mom if she was having an issue or a problem.’ Nothing makes me happier than if I can help someone with their water bill, vehicle sticker, a late fee, and really work with people because they’re so appreciative,” Horne said.

He acknowledged that public servants sometimes get a bad rap.

“It’s not accurate. I’ve worked in public and private,” he said. “I can tell you that people in government work harder than people in a lot of other industries. We squeeze every dime and penny as much as we can.”

Horne replaces Dan Denys, who resigned to focus on finance jobs he has in other suburbs.

“When you follow behind someone who is talented and did a great job, you want to hold up that same standard,” Horne said.

Lyons conducted a nationwide search for a new finance director.

The pandemic offers new challenges for finance directors, he said.

“I think the biggest challenge in any local government now, there’s the revenue constraints. There’s the ‘new normal.’ What does it mean for sales tax? What does it mean for business growth and development?

“What’s great about Lyons is the wonderful opportunity with the 40-acre site. It’s going to be a fantastic opportunity. When I was in Morton Grove, I was involved with setting up a couple of TIF districts,” Horne said.

The site he referred to is the former quarry site – now filled – just west of the village hall.

“You’re going to have developers. They’ll do proposals. You’ll get the images and designs and you’re going to see something you hadn’t thought of,” Horne said.

Mayor Christopher Getty is pleased Horne was hired.

“The number one reason we were attracted to him and ultimately offered him the job is his extensive experience,” Getty said.

“We did not want to bring in somebody to the finance director position that didn’t know what they were doing and didn’t have the capacity to do the job on Day One.”

“He exceeds that level of competence. He knows exactly what he’s doing, the exact direction to go. And he’s comfortable in the job. That’s what stood out to us,” Getty said.

Horne was sworn in by Village Clerk Irma Quintero during the April 19 village board meeting.

Horne and his wife have two sons and one daughter. Their sons have special needs. Their daughter plans to play college tennis, following her mother’s footsteps.

Mindy Horne – whose maiden name was Weiner – grew up in Morton Grove. She was the state singles tennis champ in Illinois playing for Maine East High School in 1988-89 and 1989-90.

She played tennis at Clemson University, where she met her future husband.

At Clemson, Horne earned a bachelor’s degree in financial management. They moved to the Chicago area and he earned his MB at Northeastern Illinois University in Chicago.

“My perception of Chicago, from South Carolina, was completely different from what I found here,” he said. “A lot of nice, salt-of-the-earth people. Home grown.”

He grew up on Horne-Taylor Road in Saint George, S.C., a town of about 3,000 people.

He didn’t realize his future was in finance until his sophomore year at Clemson.

“One day, I was looking through a Forbes or Fortune magazine and I was fascinated with the idea of mutual funds,” he said.

“My roommate said, ‘I’ve got to be honest with you. I see you the way you’re reading that magazine and the way you’re so interested in it. I see you doing something with finance.’”

Asked if Lyons did anything special for him on his first day, Horne smiled and said: “Actually, I brought the bagels from New York Bagels & Bialy in Niles.”

A village employee later treated him to lunch.

1 Comment

  1. Earl on April 26, 2022 at 4:05 pm

    Congratulations Mr. Horne and hopefully you’ll keep politics above the fray. Now as for your boss remember Mayor Christopher Getty is STILL UNDER CURRENT FEDERAL INVESTIGATION for CORRUPTION…????



Local News

Sorry, we couldn't find any posts. Please try a different search.

Neighbors

Appeals court skeptical of Mike Bost’s case to stop ballot counts after Election Day

Appeals court skeptical of Mike Bost’s case to stop ballot counts after Election Day

By HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com CHICAGO – A panel of federal appellate judges on Thursday seemed skeptical of legal arguments made on behalf of Republican U.S. Rep. Mike Bost, who claims Illinois’ law allowing counting of mail-in ballots for two weeks after an election is in violation of federal law. Bost’s late 2022…

DCFS hires on-the-spot at hiring events

DCFS hires on-the-spot at hiring events

By BETH HUNDSDORFER  Capitol News Illinois bhundsdorfer@capitolnewsillinois.com Cyrenthia Threat spent Wednesday morning at a hiring event in Fairview Heights waiting for word on whether she was hired by the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services.  Threat wants to move to Illinois from Georgia where she works as a social worker. She has 20 years…

Capitol Briefs: Advocates push for guaranteed income, child care assistance

Capitol Briefs: Advocates push for guaranteed income, child care assistance

By HANNAH MEISEL & DILPREET RAJU Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com The Illinois Supreme Court on Wednesday agreed to hear the case of actor Jussie Smollett, who was convicted for staging a hate crime against him in 2019 in a case that drew criticism for Cook County’s top prosecutor. Smollett made what turned out to be…

Illinois teacher shortage persists, survey finds

Illinois teacher shortage persists, survey finds

By PETER HANCOCK  Capitol News Illinois  phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com  SPRINGFIELD – Illinois continues to suffer from a shortage of teachers and other education professionals, although recent efforts by the state to ease the strain have made an impact.  That’s according to the latest annual survey of school officials from the Illinois Association of Regional Superintendents of Schools,…

Bills in state Senate would further regulate battery storage and disposal

Bills in state Senate would further regulate battery storage and disposal

COLE LONGCOR Capitol News Illinois clongcor@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD — Two bills that would regulate battery disposal and storage are awaiting action from the full Illinois Senate after unanimous committee approval.   Senate Bill 3481, sponsored by Sen. Sara Feigenholtz, D-Chicago, would require facilities that store electric vehicle batteries to register with the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency…

Prisoner Review Board chair, member resign in wake of boy’s fatal stabbing by released inmate

Prisoner Review Board chair, member resign in wake of boy’s fatal stabbing by released inmate

By HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com The longtime chair and a relatively new member of the Illinois Prisoner Review Board have resigned, Gov. JB Pritzker’s office announced Monday. The governor’s office announced the pair’s resignations within hours of each other nearly two weeks after Crosetti Brand was released from Stateville Correctional Center. Brand is…

Highest-ranking woman in state police history reflects on experience as force looks to diversify

Highest-ranking woman in state police history reflects on experience as force looks to diversify

By ALEX ABBEDUTO   Capitol News Illinois  abbeduto@capitolnewsillinois.com  The night before Rebecca Hooks started at the Illinois State Police Academy in 2002, she spoke on the phone with her father and her brother – both of whom worked in law enforcement.  Her father encouraged her, telling her she was strong and could get through the…

After being rebuffed by regulators, utilities file slimmed-down spending plans

After being rebuffed by regulators, utilities file slimmed-down spending plans

 By ANDREW ADAMS Capitol News Illinois aadams@capitolnewsillinois.com CHICAGO — State regulators are once again considering massive electric utility spending plans that would affect the state’s climate goals – and 5.4 million electric customers’ monthly bills – after rejecting previous versions late last year. The Illinois Commerce Commission forced the state’s two major electric utilities, Commonwealth…

After being rebuffed by regulators, utilities file slimmed-down spending plans

After being rebuffed by regulators, utilities file slimmed-down spending plans

 By ANDREW ADAMS Capitol News Illinois aadams@capitolnewsillinois.com CHICAGO — State regulators are once again considering massive electric utility spending plans that would affect the state’s climate goals – and 5.4 million electric customers’ monthly bills – after rejecting previous versions late last year. The Illinois Commerce Commission forced the state’s two major electric utilities, Commonwealth…

After being rebuffed by regulators, utilities file slimmed-down spending plans

After being rebuffed by regulators, utilities file slimmed-down spending plans

 By ANDREW ADAMS Capitol News Illinois aadams@capitolnewsillinois.com CHICAGO — State regulators are once again considering massive electric utility spending plans that would affect the state’s climate goals – and 5.4 million electric customers’ monthly bills – after rejecting previous versions late last year. The Illinois Commerce Commission forced the state’s two major electric utilities, Commonwealth…