File #: 18-1017    Version: 1
Type: Ordinance Status: Passed
File created: 11/21/2018 In control: City Council
On agenda: 1/21/2020 Final action: 1/21/2020
Title: Pass the ordinance prohibiting the use of groundwater as a potable water supply by the installation or use of potable water supply wells or by any other method within the specified limits surrounding the property at 1598 W. Ogden Avenue, Naperville, IL. 60540 and adjacent rights of way, including points of withdrawal by the City of Naperville
Attachments: 1. Ordinance Prohibiting the Use of Groudwater at 1598 W Ogden Ave.
CITY COUNCIL AGENDA ITEM

ACTION REQUESTED:
title
Pass the ordinance prohibiting the use of groundwater as a potable water supply by the installation or use of potable water supply wells or by any other method within the specified limits surrounding the property at 1598 W. Ogden Avenue, Naperville, IL. 60540 and adjacent rights of way, including points of withdrawal by the City of Naperville
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DEPARTMENT: Transportation, Engineering and Development

SUBMITTED BY: William J. Novack, Director of TED/City Engineer

BOARD/COMMISSION REVIEW:
NA

BACKGROUND:
Numerous properties throughout the City of Naperville have been used for commercial and industrial purposes throughout the years. Certain users like gasoline stations and dry cleaners have left a large environmental impact on the community due to spills and subsequent contamination.

Many of the current property owners have been working with the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA) to clean up their sites and obtain certification by issuance of a No Further Remediation (NFR) Letter by the IEPA. The NFR letter provides value and comfort to the property owner that the IEPA has certified that the site has been cleaned up to certain standards.

The issuance of a NFR does not mean that a property is completely cleaned-up. Most of the time the IEPA issues NFR's for sites that still have small amounts of contamination present, they just make sure that certain other controls are in place to protect the public health. Some of those controls include engineered barriers, such as paved parking lots or concrete slabs of structures. Another common control is a restrictive groundwater ordinance. The groundwater ordinance prohibits the use of wells for any source of potable water within the area of contamination as determined by the IEPA.

The City receives many requests for these groundwater ordinances. We tell all the petitioners that they need to clean their site up and get to the point where the gro...

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