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Our Village Code states a Home Occupation may be allowed if the general public is, “…unaware of its existence.” | March 23, 2023 Little Ducky Flower Farm Facebook photo seen above

Our Zoning Board of Appeals (ZBA) will hold a special public hearing on a relatively new resident’s request to add “Agritourism“ to the list of allowed uses in the R-1 Residential District this evening. We’d like to share what we’ve learned about the resident, and “Agritourism.“

Background

The applicant is a newcomer to Illinois it seems. He closed on his property at 315 Dundee Road on December 30, 2021. A month later, on January 27, 2022, he filed with the Illinois Secretary of State’s office to register a Limited Liability Company (LLC) under the name of, “YAMAMOTO FAMILY FARMS LLC.”

Weeks later (when presumably the ground was still frozen), Yamamoto registered a Facebook account: “Little Ducky Flower Farm.” On May 3, Little Ducky Flower Farm launched an Instagram page.

With his plans progressing so quickly, one might wonder if he happened to check to see if Village Code allowed for his commercial his plans?  Apparently not.

Little Ducky Flower Farm website

According to Little Ducky Flower Farm website, they sell bulbs, t-shirts, wool products, ducks and sheep and, of course, flowers.  Marketing of Little Ducky Flower Farm has included television coverage on WGN9, CBS2 Chicago and NBC5.

Country Magazine featured Little Ducky Flower Farm in a piece and there was a “Lunch and Learn” seminar at Barrington’s White House conducted on September 28th of last year.

Things progressed quickly with marketing and sales based at 315 Dundee Road, however the  Village issued a stop to it with a cease and desist order in May of this year. Tonight our Zoning Board of Appeals has been asked to consider “Agritourism“ businesses to be allowed in our R-1 Residential community.

So, what is agritourism?

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Agricultural Library defines it as follows:

Agritourism is a form of commercial enterprise that links agricultural production and/or processing with tourism to attract visitors onto a farm, ranch, or other agricultural business for the purposes of entertaining or educating the visitors while generating income for the farm, ranch, or business owner.”

The National Agricultural Law Center cites some examples of agritourism, including:

  • pumpkin picking patches;
  • corn mazes;
  • U-Pick operations;
  • petting and feeding zoos;
  • hay rides;
  • cut-your-own Christmas tree farms;
  • dude ranches;
  • demonstration farms;
  • agricultural museums;
  • living history farms;
  • on-farm farmers’ markets;
  • winery tours and wine tasting;
  • rural bed & breakfasts; and
  • garden tours.

In the “Agritourism” filing submitted to our ZBA (seen here), the applicant has proposed a plan for parking for cars and presumably other “vehicles” seen below:

He has also posted a “Roadmap” for his zoning approval plans for the business on his website:

Our thoughts

It’s unclear how or when this homeowner communicated his plans with the Village or when the Village became aware of what was occurring at 315 Dundee Road. The answer to both it appears is too late, and that is unfortunate. Now it is clear that the property owner is asking the ZBA to forgive the violation(s) and allow him to reopen his “Boutique Flower Farm,” business.

Our Comprehensive Plan states, “Barrington Hills is a unique single-family residential community….” Little Ducky Flower Farm’s commercial operations did not and will not fit that description. And, if our ZBA approves the applicant’s requests, we fear homeowners in the Village might become sitting ducks to commercialization of neighboring properties.

We implore the members of our Zoning Board to deny this application, thus protecting our residential community.

– The Observer

Related: Special Zoning Board of Appeals meeting scheduled Tuesday,” “Special Zoning Board of Appeals Public Hearing August 20th

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You TOO could have (or live next to) a property like this one soon if “Agritourism” Special Use is allowed. Learn how in the Zoning Board’s agenda.

Our Zoning Board of Appeals will be holding a special meeting tomorrow evening beginning at 6:30 PM. Topics on their agenda include:

Public hearing

  • Text Amendment to Section 5-5-3(A) Special Uses, R1 District of the Zoning Ordinance to include in the list of Special Uses, Agritourism, filed by Chris Yamamoto

Public meeting

  • [Vote] Text Amendment to Section 5-5-3(A) Special Uses, R1 District of the Zoning Ordinance to include in the list of Special Uses, Agritourism, filed by Chris Yamamoto
  • Code Modification Discussion – Renewable Energy

A copy of the agenda can be viewed and downloaded here.

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The Village will be hosting a special meeting of the Riding Clan/Equestrian Commission this evening at 5:30 PM. Items on the meeting outline include:

  • [Vote] Minutes – June 10, 2024 Special Meeting
  • [Vote] Minutes – September 7, 2022 Special Meeting (tabled from June 10, 2024)
  • [VOTE] RECOMMENDATION – EQUESTRIAN TRAIL, SUBDIVISION OF THE PROPERTY LOCATED AT 01-06-200-021 AND 01-06-200-027 (99 & 101 BATEMAN ROAD)

At the time of this posting, no detail was published other than that shown above in advance of the meeting.  The one-page outline the Village has provided can be found here, but who are we kidding?

One Clan/Commission member informed the Village Administrator at the last meeting, “I don’t think you can tell us what we can and can’t discuss!” Clearly, it’s “anything can happen” Wednesday (as usual) tonight.

Related: Village hosted Riding Club meeting recordings released,” “Special Equestrian Commission meeting today,” “Special Plan Commission meeting this evening

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“PUBLIC HEARING Before the Zoning Board of Appeals Village of Barrington Hills Text Amendment – Special Uses, Section 5-5-3(A), R1 District Notice is hereby given that a Public Hearing will be held on Tuesday, August 20, 2024, at 6:30 p.m. by the Zoning Board of Appeals of the Village of Barrington Hills at the Village Hall, 112 Algonquin Road, Barrington Hills, Illinois, concerning an application filed by Chris Yamamoto, 315 Dundee Road, Barrington Hills, Illinois, which requests a text amendment to section 5-5-3(A) Special Uses, R1 District, of the Zoning Ordinance to include, in the list of Special Uses, Agritourism.

A copy of the Zoning Ordinance and the text amendment application is available for examination by appointment at the office of the Village Clerk at the Village Hall, weekdays during business hours, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

All interested parties are invited to attend the Public Hearing and will be given an opportunity to be heard. Written comment on the proposed amendment to be made part of the record of this proceeding will be accepted in the Office of the Village Clerk through 3:00 PM, August 20, 2024.

By: Village Clerk Village of Barrington Hills clerk@barringtonhills-il.gov 847-551-3000.”

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Claire Kirsch and her dog at home in Vassar, Mich. | Brittany Greeson for The New York Times

By Katie Thomas | The New York Times

Pets these days are just like us. They get birthday cakes, day care and rubber boots to wear in the snow. Their health care is becoming more human, too — for better and for worse.

Decades ago, animal care was relatively rudimentary. Veterinarians usually owned their own clinics, and the options to treat a sick or injured pet were limited. Today, animal hospitals are equipped with expensive magnetic resonance imaging machines, round-the-clock critical care units and teams of specialists in cancer, cardiology and neurology. For pets and the people who love them, the advances are welcome.

But as animals’ health care has changed to more closely resemble our own, it has also taken on some of the problems of the human system, including the biggest one: cost. The price of veterinary care has soared more than 60 percent over the past decade, outpacing inflation. Private equity firms have snapped up hundreds of independent clinics, in a trend reminiscent of corporate roll-ups of doctors’ offices. Veterinarians around the country told me that they worry this is changing the way that they practice, as they face growing pressure to push costly treatments and order more tests.

The changed landscape means that even as veterinarians can do more for dogs and cats than ever before, pet owners face sometimes heartbreaking decisions about whether they can afford the care. (Read more in our story on the topic.)

Changes in the industry

About one-quarter of primary care clinics and three-quarters of specialty clinics are owned by corporations, according to Brakke Consulting, which focuses on the animal health industry. Sometimes, the corporate ownership is not obvious: Many private equity firms do not change the name of the vet clinic when they take it over.

Most veterinarians are paid, at least in part, based on how much money they bring into a practice, whether that is by ordering tests, selling prescription dog food or performing procedures. One veterinarian said she quit her job after she was told her “cost per client” was too low; another said she was told she needed to see 21 animals a day, about a half-dozen more than her current workload.

Retired veterinarian David Roos and his dog, Chester. | Mike Kai Chen for The New York Times

Other veterinarians said the pressure had no influence on the care they provided. In interviews, they said they bore the brunt of pet owners’ complaints, even when they have little to do with setting prices. Veterinarians make far less money than doctors for humans, and are also often in debt from years of education. Prices have gone up partly because of the rising cost of drugs, vaccines and other supplies, as well as worker salaries in a tight labor market.

One veterinarian I interviewed, Dr. Pam Nichols of South Jordan, Utah, has seen the transformation firsthand. When she was starting out in the 1990s, she said she used to sneak dachshunds into the human hospital where her father was a radiologist to give them M.R.I. scans. If the dog needed surgery, the bill would be about $2,000. Now, she said, a similar dog might get an M.R.I. and a CT scan, and will probably be operated on by a specialist who is assisted by several nurses. The cost could reach $10,000.

Tough choices for owners

Veterinary care differs from human health care in one big way: Most pet owners pay out of their own pocket — and in full — before leaving the vet’s office. While pet insurance is available, only a small percentage of pet owners have it.

A generation ago, pet owners with a seriously ill animal may have had little choice but to opt for euthanasia if they wanted to relieve their pet’s suffering. Now, they must choose between extending the animal’s life and going into what can be debilitating debt, or letting an animal die. I spoke to some pet owners who were still paying off credit card debt years after their animals had died. And animal welfare groups said owners frequently relinquished their pets to shelters because they couldn’t afford veterinary bills.

For many people, though, the sacrifices are worth it. That was the case for Claire Kirsch, who was earning less than $10 an hour as a veterinary technician in Georgia when her own dog, Roscoe, and her horse, Gambit, each had medical emergencies, resulting in bills that totaled more than $13,000. The animals would have died if she had not opted for the additional care. She took a higher-paying job, maxed out a credit card and tapped into her husband’s retirement account to pay off the debt.

“I knew I would never be able to forgive myself if we didn’t try,” she said.

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“PUBLIC HEARING Before the Zoning Board of Appeals Village of Barrington Hills Text Amendment Notice is hereby given that a Public Hearing will be held on Monday, July 15, 2024, at 6:30 p.m. by the Zoning Board of Appeals of the Village of Barrington Hills at the Village Hall, 112 Algonquin Road, Barrington Hills, Illinois, on a text amendment to section 5-3-9 Bulk Regulations relative to berm and fence heights which has been initiated by the Zoning Board of Appeals.

A copy of the proposed amendment is available for examination by appointment at the office of the Village Clerk at the Village Hall, weekdays during business hours, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. All interested parties are invited to attend the Public Hearing and will be given an opportunity to be heard.

Written comments on the proposed amendment to be made part of the record of this proceeding will be accepted in the Office of the Village Clerk through 3:00 PM, July 15, 2024.

By: Village Clerk Village of Barrington Hills clerk@barringtonhills-il.gov 847-551-3000”

Daily Herald Marketplace

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Illinois State Representative Nabeela Syed will be speaking at tonight’s BACOG meeting.

The Barrington Area Council of Governments (BACOG)  is scheduled to have multiple meets today at the Barrington Hills Village Hall.

The first is a meeting of the BACOG Connectivity Committee originally scheduled for March 20, 2024, but postponed until today we believe at 5:30 PM.  Topics include:

  • Current and Potential Projects, and
  • Coordination with Lake and Cook County 5-Year Road Programs

The BACOG Finance Committee meets at 6:40 PM to cover:

  • (Approval) Minutes of May 23, 2023*
  • Proposed Budget for FY 24-25*
    • Adjustments for FY 2023-24, and
    • Use of Business Partner Contributions

At 7:00 PM, the BACOG Executive Board meets.  Topics on their agenda include:

  • Discussion with Invited Guest Illinois State Representative Nabeela Syed
  • Public Comment
  • (Approval) Minutes of March 20, 2024*
  • (Approval) Treasurer’s Report for April 2024*
  • Committee and Liaison Reports
    • Connectivity Committee (President Rusteberg)
    • Legislative Committee (President Darch)
    • Northwest Water Planning Alliance (President McCombie)
  • Member Updates, and,
  • Director’s Report (Executive Director)

We’d be happy to post copies of these agendas. However, BACOG does not post them on their website. They simply print and tape them to the windows of member offices, despite the following:

“Public bodies that have a website must post the agenda of any regular meetings of the governing body (i.e. County Board, Board of Trustees, Board of Commissioners, School Board, etc.) at least 48 hours prior to said meeting. Any agenda of a regular meeting that is posted on a public body’s website shall remain posted until the regular meeting is concluded.

Further, the last time BACOG posted any meeting minutes was in January, and:

“Any public body that has a website must post the minutes of a regular meeting of its governing body (i.e. County Board, Board of Trustees, Board of Commissioners, School Board, etc) on the website within 10 days after the approval of the minutes by the public body. Public bodies must approve the minutes of the previous meeting either by the next meeting or within 30 days, whichever is later. These minutes must stay on the website for at least 60 days after their initial posting.”

So much for compliance and transparency.

* Attachment follows the agenda

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By Mark Glennon | Founder of Wirepoints

If you haven’t read it, you’ve missed what every journalist in America has probably read: a brutal column on how National Public Radio (NPR) lost America’s trust, written last week by a 25-year NPR veteran, Uri Berliner.

It may be shaping up as a game-changer, but not because it exposed anything new.  It didn’t, but this time, most every national news outlet in America reported on Berliner’s column and, more surprisingly, didn’t deny much of it.

Berliner’s column seems to be cranking the spotlight on mainstream media up to full blast. NPR may be among the very worst, but much of what Berliner wrote applies to much of the traditional news media. Hopefully, all media will get the message – in Illinois, too.

NPR, as Berliner describes, is hostile to viewpoint diversity, staffed entirely by leftists and woke to the point of silliness. NPR, he says, embraced a knee-jerk, activist, scolding posture, representing the “distilled worldview of a very small segment of the U.S. population.”

Most importantly, Berliner describes how NPR willfully distorted the news. It peddled the Russia collusion hoax, rejected any coverage of the Hunter Biden laptop and its evidence of Biden family corruption, and censored criticism of establishment views on Covid.

That’s what most Americans already know, which is part of Berliner’s point. NPR’s audience has consequently shrunk to a niche on the far left, he explained. For NPR, Berliner says, that’s “devastating both for its journalism and its business model.” [Emphasis added.]

People are consuming less news, worsening the financial plight of traditional news media, though the downturn has hit most newer, online sights as well.

Read more here.

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By Ted Dabrowski and John Klingner | Wirepoints

Wirepoints is continuously asked by parents and educational groups for long-term student outcome data for their districts and schools. They are looking for trends to understand how badly outcomes have stagnated or worsened.

The problem is, we can’t provide good long-term trends. The Illinois State Board of Education has a history of switching up its standardized tests every half-decade or so, making it impossible for us to track long-term outcomes at the school and district level. And national tests, which do provide long-term data, only cover top-level state and Chicago data.

Unsurprisingly, ISBE is about to make another change. They’ve announced a switch to the ACT from the SAT. Whether by chance or design, they’re making it more difficult to hold individual schools and districts accountable. And given the dismal student outcomes and spiking education costs in Illinois, one can’t be blamed for thinking they’re switching it up on purpose.

The ACT was the test of choice from 2009 to 2017. Then ISBE switched to the SAT from 2018 through 2024. Now it’s apparently going to switch back to the ACT.

From Chalkbeat:

“Next year, Illinois high school juniors could take the ACT instead of the SAT as the federally-mandated state test. The Illinois State Board of Education has started the process of awarding a three-year, $53 million contract to ACT Inc.

The College Board’s contract to administer the SAT for 11th graders and PSAT for ninth and 10 graders is set to expire June 30.

Illinois education officials are essentially resetting the baseline for student performance by changing the test high schoolers take. Results in 2025 and beyond won’t be directly comparable to the 2017-2024 period because the ACT and SAT are different tests.

Read more here.

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The Barrington Hills Park District Board/Riding Club of Barrington Hills will hold their monthly meeting this evening in person and via Zoom at 7:00 PM. Some items on their agenda include:

  • Review the Rental Agreement Forms
  • Review Riding Center Rules
  • Electrical Quotes
  • Tennis Court Repair/Maintenance Bid
  • Village Zoning Changes(?), and
  • Equestrian Commission(?)

A copy of their agenda can be viewed here. Instructions for accessing the meeting remotely can be found here

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