Former Illinois “super mayor” Tiffany Henyard was reportedly a resident of Georgia while still serving as Dolton mayor in 2025.
After losing her bid for re-election as Dolton mayor, Henyard has since launched a campaign to run in South Fulton County’s District 5 on the Fulton County Commission as a Republican.
Last week, Henyard took part in a special meeting of the Fulton County Board of Registration & Elections regarding her qualifications to run for a position prior to the Commission District 5 Primary Election, which will be held on May 19.
County law states that a candidate must be a resident of the county for 12 months prior to running in an election.
Advertisement
Henyard argued during the meeting that she has been a legal resident of Fulton County since May 1, 2025.
Tiffany Henyard was reportedly a resident of Georgia while still serving as mayor of Dolton, Illinois in 2025. Instagram / @tiffanyhenyard
However, Board Commissioner Julie Adams pointed out that she served as Dolton mayor until May 4, 2025, when she formally left office.
“Did you know that in Cook County, Illinois, to hold an office there, you have to be a resident in that jurisdiction?” Adams said.
“So, you were the mayor until May 4 of 2025, but yet you’re saying you became a resident of Georgia on May 1 of 2025.”
Henyard reportedly received a gross pay of $12,007 from March 7 to May 2, 2025 as Dolton mayor while living in Georgia — breaking Illinois law. Instagram / @tiffanyhenyard
“OK,” Henyard responded.
Advertisement
Henyard claimed during the meeting that she was essentially a “lame duck” after losing the mayoral primary election in February to Dolton Trustee Jason House, which led to her moving out of the state.
“But you were mayor, correct?” Adams asked.
During a special meeting, Henyard argued she was a “lame duck” after losing the mayoral election in February 2025 to Dolton Trustee Jason House. Kyle Mazza/SOPA Images / Shutterstock
“My title was mayor, yes,” Henyard said.
Board member Douglass Selby also remarked that Henyard appeared to still be registered to vote in Illinois.
The elections board later voted 3-1 to approve Henyard’s residency requirement to run for the Fulton County Commission.
Advertisement
Henyard and her boyfriend Kamal Woods smile in a post on Instagram. Instagram/Tiffany Henyard
Henyard did not answer questions on whether she still received payments from Dolton through her term as mayor and Thornton Township trustee.
Illinois state law dictates that mayors must live in the municipality they represent for their entire term.
WGN Investigates found through public records that Henyard received a gross pay of $12,007 from March 7 to May 2, 2025 as Dolton mayor and roughly $8,600 from Thornton Township for the first two weeks in May when she would have presumably moved to Georgia.
Henyard has been dubbed the “worst mayor in America” after corruption allegations and financial mismanagement of village funds.
A financial probe reportedly revealed that the village of Dolton’s bank account fell from its initial $5.6 million balance to a $3.6 million deficit.
Advertisement
Amid corruption allegations among officials, residents accused her of using village funds as her own piggy bank by billing taxpayers thousands of dollars for her hair and makeup team, as well as going on a lavish trip to Las Vegas.
BEECHER CITY, Ill. (WAND) – Farms were damaged in Effingham County Wednesday evening when a powerful storm swept through at around 8 p.m.
The McKay Farm in Beecher City was heavily damaged when the rapidly moving storm hit.
“Two buildings were totally destroyed,” Dan McKay told WAND News on Thursday. “We’ve got five grain bins and they’re all damaged.”
Advertisement
The buildings collapsed onto farm equipment and a semi that were parked in the structures. A utility pole was snapped and ripped out of the ground.
In nearby Shumway, another farm was hit. A barn collapsed, with a grain bin being ripped apart and debris traveling several hundred feet through a nearby corn field. A house on the property was also damaged.
Powerful tornadoes leave behind devastation in Illinois – CBS News
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Watch CBS News
Violent tornadoes ripped through central Illinois on Wednesday, leaving behind swaths of destruction. One man described how he shielded himself and his family from the storms. Rob Marciano reports.
PEORIA, Ill. (WMBD) — Multiple rounds of severe storms impacted central Illinois on Wednesday bringing damaging wind gusts and very heavy rain. Our area was sparred from the worst of the tornadoes, but areas south of I-72 were not so fortunate with damage to homes and injuries reported.
An outflow boundary from our morning storms struggled to get any further north than highway 136, which was about 30 miles south of what was anticipated early this morning. This kept the risk of strong tornadoes just south of our local region, though we still had plenty of rain and instances of large hail and gusty winds roll through central Illinois.
The worst of the wind came with the storms in the morning. As the severe storms moved through the area they produced measured gust of 60-70 mph with localized gusts estimated to be around 80 mph. The winds resulted in tree, powerline, and structural damage from Knox through McLean County.
Storm Reports
Galesburg – Tree and power line damage Williamsfield – Roof partially torn off building Princeville – Tree damage Dunlap – 60 mph wind gust Bellevue – 60 mph wind gust Germantown Hills – Trees down Roanoke – 60 mph wind gust El Paso – Power poles snapped El Paso – Multiple semis and campers rolled on I-39 Gidley – 70 mph wind gust Chenoa – Semi rolled on I-55