All of the Townships will have their Annual Town Meeting.  Here is some friendly advice.
  This is the only meeting where township residents have a “real say”. You can make huge changes to the Township policy and activities if you plan ahead. You need people to come, support your requests, and vote for your motions. 
  At some Town meetings the meeting is already preplanned by those currently in power.  The Sergeant at Arms is often preselected and he can intimidate many people and prevent your views from being discussed. Every township trustee or employee has all of their family and friends there , so it may be a lot to overcome. 
  If you  wants to speak at the Town meeting,  you must ask in writing  to be placed on the agenda, 30 DAYS ahead of the meeting.   The 30 day written notice includes any  motion which you wish to propose. Have your exact motion submitted in writing 30 days before the meeting.  Also you need 15 signatures of township voters on your request.
  SEE THE LAW:  Here are some citation of law as presented by an association of townships for a town hall meeting.
  III. ANNUAL AND SPECIAL TOWNSHIP MEETINGS 
  A. Annual Town Meeting 
  1. Date and Time 
  The annual town meeting, held for the transaction of the business of 
  the township, must occur on the second Tuesday of April in each 
  after 6 p.m. 60 ILCS 1/30-5. The annual town meeting (or special town 
  meeting) cannot be held earlier than 6 p.m. unless the time is changed by 
  the electors at a duly convened meeting. 60 ILCS 1/40-5; 60 ILCS 1/30-
  30. The words .town meeting. have a definite and well settled meaning in 
  township law, and are uniformly used to describe the annual meetings of 
  the town for the purpose of electing township officers, and transacting 
  such business as the electors are by law authorized to transact. Chicago I. 
  & R. Co. v. Mallory, 101 Ill. 583 (1881). The place of holding annual 
  town meetings must be some convenient place in the township fixed by 
  the township board. 60 ILCS 1/30-15. Whenever the date conflicts with 
  the celebration of Passover, the township board may postpone the annual 
  town meeting to the first Tuesday following the last day of Passover. 60 
  ILCS 1/30-5. 
  Elections for township officers are held in accordance with the 
  consolidated schedule of elections prescribed by the general election law. 
  60 ILCS 1/30-5. Whenever the consolidated election as provided for in the 
  Election Code is rescheduled to the second Tuesday in April, the annual 
  town meeting must be held on the third Tuesday in April at the time 
  designated by the electors or the township board. 60 ILCS 1/30-5. 
  2. Notice of Annual Town Meeting
  Notice of the time and place of holding annual and special town 
  meetings is given by the township clerk (or, in the clerk’s absence, the 
  supervisor, assessor, or collector) by posting written or printed notices in 
  three of the most public places in the township, at least 10 days before the 
  meeting and, if there is an English language newspaper published in the 
  township, by at least one publication in that newspaper before the 
  meeting. 60 ILCS 1/30-10. If the above procedures are followed, the 
  township electors are charged with notice of the time of the meeting and 
  with knowledge that any and all corporate business of the township may 
  then be lawfully transacted. Thorp v. King, 42 Ill. App. 513 (1891). Not 
  less than 10 days before the annual meeting, the township board shall 
  adopt an agenda for the annual meeting. A group of fifteen or more 
  registered voters in the township may request additional agenda items for 
  consideration by the electors to the township clerk by March 1. The 
  agenda adopted by the Board shall include such requests if relevant to the 
  powers granted to the electors under the Township Code. 60 ILCS 1/30-
  10(b). If the agenda item is not included on the agenda for a township 
  annual meeting, fifteen electors may request the township clerk to order a 
  special meeting. However, again, the meeting must be relevant to the 
  powers granted to the electors under the Township Code. 60 ILCS 1/35-5.
  A 2002 case involving county governments raised some doubt as to 
  whether new matters added to an agenda can perhaps be discussed but not 
  acted upon. See Rice v. Board of Trustees of Adams County, 326 
  Ill.App.3d 1120 (4th Dist. 2002). This could also apply to townships, but 
  because township electors are required to have only one meeting per year, 
  and because the statute allows the agenda to be added to by electors in 
  accordance with the procedures outlined above (so long as the agenda 
  item is relevant to the powers granted to the electors under the Township 
  Code), in order to allow both discussion and action, there is a strong 
  argument that action may be taken if the statutory procedures are 
  followed. 
  3. Admission to Meeting 
  Electors at the meeting must be verified as voters registered within 
  the township by the township clerk, or a designee of the township clerk, 
  through the use of township voter registration lists obtained by the 
  township clerk from the election authority having jurisdiction over the 
  township and updated to include voters registered no less than 28 days 
  before the day of the meeting. 60 ILCS 1/40-5. 
  4. Call to Order 
  The electors present are called to order by the township clerk if there 
  is a clerk and he or she is present. If there is no township clerk or if the 
  township clerk is not present, the electors may elect by acclamation one of 
  their number as chairman. 60 ILCS 1/40-5. 
  5. Recessing to Move to Larger Hall 
  If there are electors desiring admittance to the meeting who cannot be 
  admitted because of the size of the meeting hall, the chairman may 
  immediately recess the meeting to a time as soon as practicable and to a 
  place sufficiently large to accommodate at least the number of electors 
  present at that time within the meeting hall and those outside the meeting 
  hall desiring to be admitted. 60 ILCS 1/40-5. 
  6. Election of Moderator 
  The electors present must choose one of their number to preside as 
  moderator of the meeting. A township official may serve as moderator. 
  Before entering upon the duties of the office, the moderator must take an 
  oath, administered by the township clerk or chairman or some other 
  officer authorized to administer oaths, to faithfully and impartially 
  discharge the duties of the office. The moderator of the meeting presides 
  at the meeting, announces the business before the meeting, preserves 
  order, and decides all questions of order. The moderator has the same 
  power and is subject to the same penalties in connection with his or her 
  conduct as moderator as are judges of election under the provisions of the 
  general election law. 60 ILCS 1/40-5. 
  7. Minutes 
  The township clerk acts as clerk of the meeting and keeps faithful 
  minutes of the proceedings in a book to be known as the township record. 
  The clerk enters every order or direction, and all rules and regulations 
  made by the meeting. The entry must be signed by the clerk and the 
  moderator of the meeting. 60 ILCS 1/40-10. 
  8. Motions 
  All questions upon motions made at town meetings are determined 
  by a majority of the electors present and voting, and the moderator 
  ascertains and declares the result of the vote upon each question. When 
  the result of any vote is questioned by one or more of the electors present, 
  the moderator makes the vote certain by causing the voters to rise and be 
  counted, or by a division of the voters. 60 ILCS 1/40-15. The amount of 
  time which might be required for balloting at a town meeting is not 
  constitutionally significant so long as all qualified electors have equal 
  opportunity to attend and vote. Smith v. Town of Proviso, 13 Ill. App. 3d 
  519, 301 N.E.2d 145 (1st Dist. 1973). 
  9. Close of Business of the Meeting