Mostly Cloudy
72°
Morris, IL
Mostly Cloudy|Forecast »

6 years into trying to get a house built, man suing Highland Park over delays

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 1)

Sheikh said he paid about $170,000 for four lots totaling about 20,000 square feet on the edge of the Village of Woods subdivision and applied to have them consolidated with the intention of building a nearly 6,000-square-foot house.

Eventually, he bought a fifth adjoining lot to satisfy city code provisions regarding the ownership of adjacent property, though city officials would not confirm his claims that they encouraged him to do so.

Although the area is zoned for housing, Sheikh's proposal required variances from the city. This was in part due to the atypical location and shape of the property, according to village records. Sheikh's property, a group of lots in a row, is unusually long and narrow, tapers at one end and borders an Illinois Department of Transportation easement.

After having his plans drawn up and suffering other delays, Sheikh's petition was sent in spring 2010 to the local zoning board, which provides recommendations to the City Council on lot consolidation and variance requests. Although Sheikh said he was advised his requests would be approved within a few weeks, the hearings continued into early 2011.

Ultimately, the board rejected Sheikh's proposed setbacks from the lot lines but recommended in favor of consolidation of the lots. However, the City Council did not act on the consolidation.

During those months, Sheikh frequently revised his plans at the zoning board's request, all the while hearing objections from neighborhood residents. Thirty residents attached their names to a letter of complaint filed with the city. They said Sheikh's planned home didn't fit the character of the neighborhood — apparently objecting more to its size and location than its stone-facade design — and would eliminate a wooded area that the homeowners said provide beauty, privacy and a noise buffer. They also expressed concerns that the new development would cause flooding.

To Sheikh, those were all excuses for what he believes was the real reason behind their opposition: his ethnicity and religion. He claims neighbors made threats against him.

"This much discrimination I have never faced," he said.

Multiple neighbors who signed the complaint declined to be interviewed, but their lawyer, John Sheldon, called the allegations "baseless" and "outrageous."

Comments


Reader Poll

Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all