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I-355 extension fails to push development into the fast lane

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When the recession hit, municipal officials negotiated a plan with the tollway allowing them to make smaller payments upfront for the interchanges and pushing off the burden until 2014 when most will make one balloon payment.

The communities collectively still owe $4.5 million for the interchange work, tollway officials said.

Lockport's city administrator Tim Schloneger said when expected projects didn't materialize and the recession crippled other city revenues, it couldn't afford a big payment to the tollway. Lockport also had to find money to pay off other debt.

The city spent $10.5 million to expand its wastewater treatment facility to accommodate expected growth in the community. Schloneger said the city planned to cover the debt with tap-on fees charged to developers, but revenues plummeted when new construction stalled.

Partly to cover the shortfall, water bills for Lockport residents went up 30 percent in 2010 and 15 percent in 2011, and are set to go up 10 percent next month and 3 percent in 2013 and 2014.

Kermit Wies with the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning said the missed expectations along the tollway extension should be a lesson for communities that get ahead of themselves, a point emphasized in the agency's comprehensive regional plan.

"It's a really good argument for not speculating," he said. "I really feel sorry for the municipalities that put themselves on that hook."

Real estate woes

Homer Glen is peppered with unfinished subdivisions where developers disappeared when the housing market crashed. The small community has nine such subdivisions, four near I-355, said Erin Venard of the village's planning and zoning department.

A study commissioned by the village found that it may cost more than $6.6 million to finish improvements in subdivisions, most of which are less than 50 percent occupied.

Tom Fijan is a longtime resident of Will County whose new neighbor is I-355. The 66-year-old retired electrician said he never wanted the extension to come roaring by his home on 151st Street in Homer Township.

From his front yard he can see the expressway traffic whiz by, and he has learned to ignore the sound of trucks as he sleeps.

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