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πŸ” Rental Inspections/Systematic Code Enforcement (SCEP)

Systematic Code Enforcement (SCEP): Arlington Heights vs Chicago

How do systematic code enforcement (scep) rules compare between Arlington Heights, IL and Chicago, IL?

Arlington Heights has fewer restrictions than Chicago.

Arlington Heights, IL

Cook County

Few Restrictions

Cook County does not run a countywide systematic code enforcement rental inspection program. Suburbs vary widely: Evanston, Oak Park, Berwyn, and Cicero operate licensing-plus-inspection regimes, while many other suburbs only respond to tenant complaints under Illinois Housing Code 765 ILCS 750.

View full Arlington Heights rules β†’

Chicago, IL

Cook County

Some Restrictions

Chicago does not run a systematic rental inspection program like Los Angeles SCEP. Inspections are complaint-driven under MCC 13-12 and the Residential Landlord Tenant Ordinance, with proactive sweeps only for problem buildings on the Strategic Task Force list.

View full Chicago rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactArlington HeightsChicago
Countywide programNone exists-
Inspection-active suburbsEvanston Oak Park Berwyn-
State statute765 ILCS 750-
Cook DPH roleLead and rodent only-
Primary code-MCC 13-12 and 5-12
Inspection model-Complaint-based, no SCEP
Proactive list-Strategic Task Force buildings
Tenant remedy window-14-day written notice
Affordable housing cycle-Every 2-3 years

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Arlington Heights FAQ

Does Cook County inspect my rental property?

Only if your suburb runs a program. Cook County DPH inspects narrow health hazards like lead and rodents but does not perform full habitability inspections in suburban rentals.

Where can I report unsafe conditions?

Start with your municipal code enforcement office. If lead, mold, or vermin are involved, also contact Cook County Department of Public Health for parallel investigation.

Chicago FAQ

Does Chicago inspect every rental annually?

No. Chicago uses a complaint-driven model. Tenants must file a 311 complaint or formal RLTO notice to trigger inspection. Buildings on the Strategic Task Force list receive proactive visits, but most rentals only see inspectors when problems surface.

What happens after a tenant complaint?

The Department of Buildings or CDPH inspects within 7 to 14 days for non-emergency issues, faster for safety hazards. Cited landlords get correction orders; failure to comply triggers administrative hearings and per-day fines.

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