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Archive for the ‘LeCompte/Anderson Commercial Horse boarding amendment’ Category

The Village has posted recordings from the last week’s Equestrian Commission meeting.

The meeting began with swearing in of three new members, one of whom has a degree in animal science, which we believe will be helpful to the commission.

The minutes from the last Equestrian Commission meeting held on August 1, 2014 were then briefly discussed and approved unanimously.

Once again, we must express our concern that certain changes to the LeCompte Horse Boarding Amendment recommended by the Equestrian Commission over a year ago were never discussed at either the Zoning or Village Board meetings, particularly the exclusion of the retroactivity clause seen below:Stricken Retroactivity Clause

Considering the Village Board meets later this month to hear public comment regarding whether or not to void the Commercial Horse Boarding Ordinance passed earlier this year, which is based on the LeCompte proposal reviewed by the Equestrian Commission, it would seem important to know why the Equestrian Commission’s recommendations were ignored.

Minutes from past Equestrian Commission meetings are not published on the Village website (as seen here), so the August 2014 draft minutes (from the meeting’s ePacket) which were approved last week with no edits can be viewed here.

The commission members then began discussing what their roles and responsibilities should be going forward.  One near-term action will be coordinating a training session for Village police officers and others invited from surrounding municipalities on handling horses who manage to get loose.

Early next month, a training session will be facilitated by the Hooved Animal Rescue & Protection Society (HARPS).  Commissioners also discussed creating a list of equine-knowledgeable residents for the police department to contact for assistance in handling any stray horses.

Discussion then moved to improving communications with the new stewards of Horizon Farms — the Forest Preserve District of Cook County.  Trustee Michelle Maison stated she was working on that matter and would be getting back to the commission members.

Members remarked Horizon Farms and the new polo field being constructed to the south across Algonquin Road to the south are both attractive to prospective home buyers.  The chair went on to state an acquaintance of hers has two polo playing prospective home buyers who are considering moving to Barrington Hills specifically because of the new polo field currently being built (her remark can be heard here).

The link to the edited recording menu from the meeting can be accessed here.

The Equestrian Commission meets quarterly, and their next scheduled meeting is on December 7, 2015.

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A copy of Case No. 2015-CH-3461, “James J. Drury III v Village of Barrington Hills,” has recently been posted to the “Village News” web page.  A copy of the document can be downloaded here.

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The Village recently released edited audio recordings from the August Village Board meeting, which we understand was relatively well attended.

Five residents made public comments at the beginning of the meeting, including a former member of the Zoning Board and a recently defeated Village Trustee in the April election.  Most of their comments centered on the special Village Board meeting scheduled for later this month, and on an item under the Administration agenda titled, “Compensation for Special Counsel.”

Before listening to the public comments made, readers should know what the special counsel compensation discussion item and vote was all about.

Earlier this year during the February Village Board meeting, former Trustees Messer, Selman and Meroni along with current board members Gohl and Harrington voted to set special counsel compensation at $0 to thwart an investigation into any improprieties that may have occurred in the process leading to the passage of the Commercial Horse Boarding Amendment.

In their ill-advised and reckless haste in doing so, they amended Title 1, Chapter 6, Section 1-6-6 of our Village Code covering compensation for all current special counsels retained by the Village.  Special Counsels are employed by the Village in various capacities: for labor negotiations, traffic court and other special attorneys besides the regular Village Attorney.

Therefore, in actuality since February, when Village Board voted monthly to approve those attorneys’ bills, it was inadvertently violating the defective amended compensation code, so clearly, the code needed to be corrected.

The second speaker of the night was a former Zoning Board member who has taken credit for single handedly crafting a number of changes to the commercial horse boarding text amendment proposal submitted by the owner of Oakwood Farms, LLC, Benjamin LeCompte, which was ultimately adopted after a veto.  Some consider his comments to be threatening to the Board, but we’ll leave that to our readers.  His comments can be heard by clicking here.

The fifth speaker, a former trustee, voiced her concern over settlement of a case stemming from a resident’s violation of the Heritage Tree Ordinance in Cook County court system.  What she failed or refused to recognize is the ordinance has not been consistently enforced by our Building Department over the years since its passage, and that inconsistency dramatically diluted the effectiveness of the ordinance, especially in a court of law.  Her comments can be heard here.

The balance of the meeting that lasted just over two hours was fairly routine until the Administration portion that lasted over forty minutes, thanks mostly to Trustee Harrington.

During that part of the meeting, President McLaughlin formally announced a special Village Board meeting which will take place in September to allow residents to weigh in on whether the Village should potentially settle litigation (Drury et al. v. Village of Barrington Hills) against the Village.  Settlement could mean voiding or repealing the Commercial Horse Boarding Text Amendment code passed earlier this year.

Next, McLaughlin prefaced the discussion on compensation for special counsel by stating that he has no immediate intention of retaining any new counsel, investigatory or otherwise.  A range of $175-650 per hour was discussed, the higher end of the range being suggested by Village Administrator, Bob Kosin.  After the ensuing discussion, the motion passed by a vote of 5-2, with Gohl and Harrington voting nay.

Michael Harrington, candidate Barrington Hills Village BoardTrustee Harrington then expressed his dissatisfaction that the President, and not the Board of Trustees, can appoint special counsel, despite the fact that this has been the case for nearly 50 years in Barrington Hills, and Illinois statutes and case law support it.  Harrington was informed multiple times that the only way this could be changed would through a referendum voted on by residents, since such a change would alter our form of government.

Not pleased with this answer, Harrington made a motion seconded by Gohl that would allow the board to vote on compensation for each individual special counsel, thus allowing for another vote to set compensation at $0.  Harrington’s motion failed by a vote of 5-2, with only he and Gohl voting in favor.

To listen to the entire special counsel discussion and vote recording, click here.

The menu for the edited audio segments from the entire August 24th meeting can be accessed here.

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The Village Board was originally scheduled to meet on September 16th at Countryside School to allow residents to publicly provide their opinions regarding what course the Village Board should take regarding pending litigation resulting from the passage of the Commercial Horse Boarding Amendment earlier this year.

The following announcement has been posted to the Village News web page:

Special Board of Trustees Meeting

Wednesday September 23 6:30 pm

In February 2015 the Board of Trustees amended the Village Code to regulate large scale commercial horse boarding through a Text Amendment to the Village Code. Previously, horse boarding was regulated under the Home Occupation provisions of the Code. Since the adoption of the Amendment, a lawsuit has been filed challenging the Text Amendment.

The Board is exploring the Villages options, including the possible settlement of the litigation. The Board is seeking input from the public on this issue. Please plan to attend the Special Village Board Meeting scheduled for Wednesday, September 23, 2015 at 6:30 p.m. at Countryside Elementary School to provide comment on the potential settlement. Please email written comments to clerk@vbhil.gov by September 22, 2015.

*Please note, at the prior Village Board Meeting another date was announced. It was changed to ensure all Trustees are able to attend. Sorry for any confusion.

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Dark HorseThe Equestrian Commission will meet for the first time in over a year tonight at 7:00 PM at Village Hall.  A copy of their agenda can be viewed here.

The last time the Equestrian Commission met was on Friday, August 1, 2014 in special session.  The purpose of that meeting was to review and comment on two of four commercial horse boarding text amendment proposals to modify our Village code.

The primary focus of that evening was the proposal submitted by the owner of Oakwood Farms, LLC, Barry LeCompte, and another submitted by the Riding Club of Barrington Hills.

The ePacket agenda for tonight’s meeting includes minutes for approval from that August 2014 meeting.  These minutes reveal a number of text change and deletion recommendations from the original proposed ordinance for the Zoning Board of Appeals to consider, and, in fact, stated, “To clarify, the redline version below is what we recommend the Village adopt.”

The most important deletion recommended to the Oakwood proposal was striking the effective retroactivity of the proposed code to June 26, 2006, which coincided with the Village Board at that time putting all horse boarding operations, regardless of scale, under the Home Occupation Ordinance.

We find no record of the Equestrian Commission’s recommendation to the Zoning Board (or to the Board of Trustees) in any meeting agendas or packets.  Nor is there any mention of them in published audio recordings, so we must ask what happened to this commission’s considered and unanimously approved change recommendations?  Why have they not seen sunshine until now, over a year later?

Furthermore, why didn’t certain members of the Equestrian Commission at that time who were present during subsequent Zoning Board public meetings speak up when their recommendations to the ZBA were not recognized and considered?  Some may consider this a rhetorical question, but it nonetheless needs to be answered.

The ePacket agenda for tonight’s commission meeting can be viewed and downloaded here.

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Friday FlashbackFollowing are some of the articles published by The Observer for the month of August in recent years. These articles, gathered from various publications and editorials, are noteworthy for residents in that they remind us of where we’ve been as a community.

‘Dark Sky’ proposal sent to Village Board – 2010

The skies over Barrington Hills won’t go dark, despite two years of work on a proposal to limit outside lighting, until 2031 under a plan moved forward Wednesday night.

The Zoning Board of Appeals chose that year over 2021 — with both dates well into the future in order to save homeowners from having to spend “a significant amount of money” to retrofit their lighting systems, said Joe von Meier, village attorney.

Read the original Tribune article here.

Horse boarding continues to draw controversy in Barrington Hills – 2011

Barrington Hills officials agree the village’s ordinance on home businesses needs tweaking to deal with large commercial horse boarders on residential properties, but they disagree on what exactly needs to be done.

The board held a joint meeting with the Zoning Board of Appeals this week to discuss the ordinance amendment ZBA members are currently working on. The Board of Appeals is looking at requiring large boarding operations, defined as 10 or more horses, to acquire a special use permit to the Home Occupation Ordinance.* That ordinance allows people to run small businesses — everything from music lessons to attorney’s offices — from their homes.

The 2011 Tribune article can be read here.

*The Zoning Board of Appeals written recommendation to the Village Board regarding commercial horse boarding code changes at that time can be viewed here.

Barrington Hills trustees mad over attorney’s removal – 2014

A dispute over the removal of Barrington Hills’ longtime village attorney played out before a capacity crowd of residents at village hall Tuesday night.

Village President Martin McLaughlin asked the previous attorney of more than 30 years, the law offices of Burke, Warren, MacKay & Serritella, to resign last week, citing the Illinois Attorney General office’s finding that the village violated the Open Meetings Act in April 2013.

He also cited the attorney’s research fees, which he called unnecessarily high.

Read the original posting with comments here.

Barrington Hills board shows opposition to bike lanes – 2014

The Barrington Hills board assured residents at a standing-room-only meeting Tuesday night that there are no plans to build bike lanes or widen any of the village’s roads.

Read the original Observer posting, including editorial and reader comments and the link to the original Daily Herald story here.

Why Barrington Hills must change –2014

This op/ed piece from August 2014 suggested that “It’s time for us to stop being a sideshow for the entertainment of surrounding communities.  Instead of “Don’t Change Barrington Hills,” a more productive goal is “Let’s Change Barrington Hills.”

Read the original editorial by clicking here.

-The Observer

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An ePacket agenda has been posted for the Village Board meeting scheduled for this evening at 6:30 PM.  This agenda includes links to most of the documents to be discussed during the meeting, and it can be accessed by clicking here.

Readers will note that a special September 16th Village Board meeting announcement is included in the packet.  This meeting will take place at Countryside School at 6:30 PM, and the purpose is to allow residents to publicly provide their opinions regarding what course the Village Board should take regarding pending litigation resulting from the passage of the Commercial Horse Boarding Amendment earlier this year.

A copy of this special meeting announcement, including an agenda for that meeting, can be viewed here.

We’ll be providing further updates on the meeting as the date approaches.

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The Village Board meets tomorrow evening at 6:30 PM.  A copy of their agenda can be viewed here.

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The Village recently released audio recordings from the July Village Board meeting.

Four residents made public comments before the board.  The first speaker provided some ideas on how Barrington Hills might better recognize veterans who participate in the upcoming annual Barrington Honor Ride & Run scheduled for August 16th, and we believe his perspectives warrant listening to by clicking here.

The public session business before the board was covered in about an hour.  This is the second month in a row where our trustees have effectively and efficiently addressed many items on their agenda in a timely manner.

Unfortunately, the same cannot be said for the executive session, since we’re told it lasted about two hours.  When the public session was reopened sometime after 9:30 PM, President McLaughlin summarized three actions agreed upon during the closed session, including one matter in particular pertaining to the potential settlement of a suit filed against the Village related to the Commercial Horse Boarding (Anderson/LeCompte) text amendment passed in February of this year.

The Village Board has directed the village attorney, Patrick Bond, to explore settlement options in the case before incurring any unnecessary legal fees in defending the Village in the case.  McLaughlin’s comments on the matter can be heard here.

Before the meeting adjourned, President McLaughlin announced the decision by the Deer Park Village Board to withdraw from BACOG, and his perspective can be heard here.

The complete menu of edited audio recordings, by agenda topic, from the meeting can be accessed here.

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Friday FlashbackFollowing are some of the articles published by The Observer for the month of July in recent years. These articles, gathered from various publications and editorials, are noteworthy for residents in that they remind us of where we’ve been as a community.

Village expected to be fully lit up again by midnight – 2011

The tiny village of Barrington Hills, which was left in the dark when a storm swept through the suburbs Monday,  should soon be lit up again, as electricity to 250 homes is expected to be restored by midnight, a spokesman for ComEd said Friday.

Since Monday, power has been restored to 1,300 households, the spokesman said.  The target date to get the village fully restored was Saturday, which displeased residents and Trustee Skip Gianopulos.

“It seems so crazy to go six days without power, especially because most of us are on well and septic,” he said.

Read the TribLocal report here.

Barrington, fire district split now irreversible – 2013

Barrington village officials told the Daily Herald editorial board Monday that the proposed split between the Barrington Fire Department and the Barrington Countryside Fire Protection District on Jan. 1 is now past the point of no return.

Fire district trustees entirely agree.

Read more of the Daily Herald story here.

Our views on two horse boarding amendment proposals – 2014

The Zoning Board of Appeals will conduct a public hearing Monday, July 21st  at 7:30 PM at Countryside School related to two proposed horse boarding text amendment proposals* submitted earlier this month.

Last week, The Observer summarized some of the highlights of the two proposals, such as hours of operations and allowable horse population (see “July 21 Zoning Board Public Hearing announced”). We have also commented on the apparent conflicts of interests stemming, in part, from these proposals.   Additional scrutiny of the proposals has led to some very troubling questions and discoveries.

Read further here.

Of Bikes and Blame – Part One: The Phantom Menace – 2014

There’s been a lot of commotion in our Village lately surrounding bike lanes, a traffic island, and about the cyclists who use (and sometimes abuse) our Village roads.

The catalyst for this upheaval was an April Plan Commission agenda item stating the Village Engineer was providing a “Bicycle Path Planning Report.”  Residents along Haegers Bend, Plum Tree and Spring Creek Roads attended the meeting and were clearly upset with what they learned.

It was at that meeting it was revealed that an application requesting road repair funding from the McHenry County Council of Mayors had been submitted by our Village back in 2012 to reconstruct Haegers Bend Road.   That funding request had been turned down.  But the Village decided to reapply for funding early this year, and was looking to add dedicated paved bicycle lanes to the reconstruction project in an attempt to improve their chances for success.

The original Observer piece can be viewed here, however most websites referenced have since been disabled.

–     The Observer

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