Will County P&Z Logo Planning Zoning

P&Z Commission Overrides Staff Denials, Rescuing Special Use Permits for Joliet Wedding Venue and Romeoville Barge Terminal

Spread the love

Will County Planning and Zoning Commission Meeting | April 7, 2026

Article Summary: The Will County Planning and Zoning Commission voted to overturn administrative denials for two delayed commercial projects—a rural wedding venue in Joliet and a petroleum barge terminal in Romeoville—after applicants missed strict deadlines to file for special use permit extensions.

Zoning Appeals Key Points:

  • Rosalio Acosta Enterprises won Appeal #AA-26-001 after missing a February 13 deadline by 12 days for a special use permit extension for a Joliet wedding barn on Baltz Road.

  • The Metropolitan Water Reclamation District (MWRD) and Ducere LLC won Appeal #AA-26-002 after missing a January 15 deadline for a barge transloading facility on the Chicago Sanitary & Ship Canal in Romeoville.

  • County zoning code forces the Zoning Administrator to automatically reject late extension requests, requiring applicants to appeal to the Commission and claim the staff made an “error” to keep their permits alive.

  • Commissioners voiced frustration with the required legal wording of the appeals, noting that staff did not actually make a mistake by following the ordinance.

On Tuesday, April 7, 2026, the Will County Planning and Zoning Commission utilized the administrative appeal process to rescue two major commercial developments from bureaucratic death, voting to override staff rejections caused by missed paperwork deadlines.

The commission heard two back-to-back appeals: Appeal #AA-26-001 for Rosalio Acosta Enterprises LTD regarding a property at 26228 W. Baltz Road in Troy Township, and Appeal #AA-26-002 for the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District (MWRD) and Ducere LLC regarding a 39-acre parcel at 18500 W. 9th Street in Romeoville.

In both cases, the applicants had previously received Special Use Permits (SUPs) from the Will County Board that required periodic extensions while they worked through complex building and site development permitting. And in both cases, the applicants filed their extension paperwork after the expiration dates.

Development Services Director Brian Radner explained that the zoning ordinance explicitly states that extension requests must be submitted before the special use permit expires.

For the Acosta property, which is developing a wedding barn with ancillary liquor service, the previous extension expired on February 13, 2026. The applicant submitted the new request 12 days later, on February 25. For the Ducere LLC barge terminal—a facility designed to transfer petroleum products from pipelines to barges—the permit expired on January 15, 2026. The applicant’s agent, Dave Nelson, submitted the extension on February 25, having mistakenly calculated the deadline from the date of his previous county board meeting.

Because the deadlines were missed, the Zoning Administrator was legally forced to reject the applications. The only recourse for the applicants to avoid starting the expensive and time-consuming SUP process completely over from scratch was to appeal to the Planning and Zoning Commission.

“They’d like the Planning and Zoning Commission to decide if we made the correct decision, and if you want to overrule staff’s decision,” Radner explained to the commissioners. “The implication of not siding with the applicant would mean that they’d have to go through the special use permit process again.”

To grant the applicants relief, the commission had to pass a motion explicitly stating that the “administrative decision being appealed is an error.”

This legal phrasing drew significant irritation from the commissioners, who universally agreed that Radner and his staff had followed the law perfectly and made no actual error.

“I think that something needs to be changed about the way these cases are worded,” Commissioner Kimberly Mitchell stated during the vote. “I mean there needs to be another way that we can approve but not say that staff is wrong.”

Chairman Hugh Stipan echoed the frustration, noting, “It is painful to say that staff made a mistake when they really didn’t make a mistake, and that’s the way we got it worded.”

Despite the semantic objections, the commission voted 4-1 to approve the Acosta appeal, and 5-0 to approve the MWRD/Ducere appeal. The affirmative votes mandate the Zoning Administrator to accept the late extension applications, which will now be forwarded to the Will County Board’s Land Use and Development Committee for final approval.

Monee Weather Full forecast →
⚠️ Hydrologic Outlook issued June 16 at 2:44AM CDT by NWS Chicago IL
Today Jun 15
Showers And Thunderstorms Likely
72° 54°

Showers And Thunderstorms Likely

💨 10 to 20 mph 💧 69%

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

NIH plots investments in women's health

NIH plots investments in women’s health

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The National Institutes of Health plan to award grants to medical school's for educational programs on menopause. Leaders at the NIH announced a competition for...
Pritzker: 'God was looking out for people' in storm-damaged Kankakee County

Pritzker: ‘God was looking out for people’ in storm-damaged Kankakee County

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Gov. J.B. Pritzker says God was looking out for people in Kankakee County this week. The governor...
Illinois Quick Hits: Correctional officer charged with sexual misconduct

Illinois Quick Hits: Correctional officer charged with sexual misconduct

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A correctional officer is charged with six counts of sexual misconduct and one count of official misconduct...
24 AGs question funding of orgs refusing to remove climate agenda from judges manuals

24 AGs question funding of orgs refusing to remove climate agenda from judges manuals

By Tate MillerThe Center Square Two dozen state attorneys general have written to the secretaries of Transportation, Energy and War asking them to investigate the federal funding of two organizations...
Costco faces lawsuit as consumers seek refunds from invalid tariffs

Costco faces lawsuit as consumers seek refunds from invalid tariffs

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square A member is suing warehouse retailer Costco to recoup his tariff costs, the latest sign that refunding President Donald Trump's invalid tariffs could be a...
Insurer won’t back Gori defense vs asbestos lawsuit fraud claims

Insurer won’t back Gori defense vs asbestos lawsuit fraud claims

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square The Gori Law Firm, America's most prolific filer of asbestos lawsuits, is facing a lawsuit accusing it of racketeering and fraud, and...
With teachers union support, committee approves charter school mandates

With teachers union support, committee approves charter school mandates

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – An Illinois lawmaker’s union-backed proposal to place new mandates on charter schools in the state is generating...
Allstate can’t delete class action over alleged secret app tracking

Allstate can’t delete class action over alleged secret app tracking

By Scott Holland | Legal NewslineThe Center Square A federal judge won’t fully end a class action accusing Allstate of using modern technology to surreptitiously track clients and use that...
Chicago voters view housing affordability as bigger issue than crime

Chicago voters view housing affordability as bigger issue than crime

By Glenn Minnis | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – With local property taxes rising, Illinois State Rep. Dan Ugaste takes news that most voters now...
New Illinois gun bill aims at glock switches; critics say it misses the real problem

New Illinois gun bill aims at glock switches; critics say it misses the real problem

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A proposed Illinois measure aimed at handguns that can be modified for automatic fire is drawing...
Illinois quick hits: Cook County spends nearly $20 million on food, housing services; Chicago Teachers Union tells teachers, students to skip school; Russell Dickerson to play Du Quoin State Fair

Illinois quick hits: Cook County spends nearly $20 million on food, housing services; Chicago Teachers Union tells teachers, students to skip school; Russell Dickerson to play Du Quoin State Fair

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Cook County spends nearly $20 million on food, housing services The Cook County Board has announced it will spend $19.9 million...
Sheriff Scam Alert Graphic

Will County Officials Warn of Zoom Court Scam Targeting Defendants for Fraudulent Dismissal Fees

Article Summary: Will County officials have issued an alert regarding a fraudulent scheme where scammers infiltrate courtroom Zoom sessions to extort money from defendants. The perpetrators use private chat features...

Illinois quick hits: Services Saturday for teen killed by line drive

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Services Saturday for teen killed by line drive A celebration of life is scheduled on Saturday, March 14, for a Chrisman,...
Critics concerned seizure detection bill impacts Illinois' small businesses

Critics concerned seizure detection bill impacts Illinois’ small businesses

By Sean Reed, The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Legislation that could make insurance companies cover seizure detection devices is advancing at the Illinois Statehouse. The...
CTA security enhancement plan follows federal push, complaints

CTA security enhancement plan follows federal push, complaints

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – After resident complaints and threatened funding cuts by the Trump administration, the Chicago Transit Authority has submitted...