The foregoing recitals are hereby incorporated into this article
as if fully set forth herein.
As used in this article, the following terms shall have the
indicated meanings:
ABUTTING
To have a common property line or zoning district line.
APPLICANT
Any person, firm, corporation or agency which submits an
application.
BERM
An earthen mound designed to provide visual interest, screen
undesirable views, and/or decrease noise.
BUFFER
A combination of physical space and vertical elements, such
as plants, berms, fences, or walls, for the purpose of which is to
separate and screen incompatible land uses from each other.
CLEARING
Any activity which removes vegetative ground cover, shrubs
or trees.
CURB
A border along the edge of a street or driveway which is
made of concrete.
DEBRIS
Nonspecific material which is no longer wanted and has been
discarded.
DRIVEWAY
That portion of a lot used to provide access from the street
to a place of residence or business and which has been graded and
graveled or surfaces with concrete, asphalt, crushed stone, or other
hard surface and dustless materials.
EASEMENT
An authorization or grant by a property owner for the use
by another, and for one or more specific purposes, of any designated
part of the property owner.
FILL
Any act by which earth, sand, gravel, rock, or any other
material is deposited, placed, replaced, pushed, dumped, pulled, transported,
or moved by man to a new location and shall include the conditions
resulting therefrom.
GRADING
Excavation or fill of any combination thereof and shall include
the conditions resulting from any excavation or fill.
HEDGE
A landscaped barrier consisting of a continuous, dense planting
of shrubs.
LANDSCAPING
Any combination of living plants (such as grass, ground cover,
shrubs, vines, hedges, or trees) and nonliving landscaping material
(such as rocks, pebbles, sand, mulch, walls, fences, or decorative
paving materials).
LOT
A platted parcel of land intended to be separately owned,
developed and otherwise used as a unit.
LOT LINE
A property boundary line of a lot.
MAINTAIN
The act of managing a piece of property which is consistent
with the regulations as adopted by the Village of Homer Glen.
PARKWAY
Any portion of the right-of-way not improved by a street
or sidewalk.
PROPERTY
A piece of land owned by a person, business, corporation
or other entity.
PROPERTY LINE
An imaginary line at the edge or boundary of a "zoning lot"
or a line at the boundary of a lot of record.
PUBLIC EASEMENT
A portion of a property which has been legally designated
for a specific purpose of being utilized by the public.
PUBLIC WAY
Any sidewalk, street, alley, highway, or other public thoroughfare.
RIGHT-OF-WAY or RIGHTS-OF-WAY
Any street, alley, other land or waterway, dedicated or commonly
used for pedestrian or vehicular traffic or other similar purposes,
including utility and/or drainage easements, in which the Village
has the right and authority to authorize or permit the location of
structures and regulate the maintenance and impact of certain actions
within rights-of-way.
ROADWAY
That part of the highway that includes the pavement and shoulders,
and curb.
SCREENING
Decorative fencing or vegetation maintained for the purpose
of concealing from view the area behind such fencing or vegetation.
SHOULDER
A width of roadway, adjacent to the pavement, providing lateral
support to the pavement edge and providing an area for emergency vehicular
stops and storage of snow removed from the pavement.
STREET
A public or private thoroughfare used, or intended to be
used, for passage or travel by motor vehicles.
SUMP PUMP DISCHARGE
The location of water discharge created by the operation
of a mechanical pump for the purpose of moving water accumulated from
water infiltration.
TRAFFIC CONTROL DEVICE
A sign, signal, marking or other device placed on or adjacent
to a street or highway (by authority of a public body or official
having jurisdiction) to regulate, warn, or guide traffic.
The purpose of this article is to establish policies, procedures,
and regulations relating to rights-of-way within the Village's jurisdiction,
which will provide public benefit consistent with the preservation
of the integrity, safe usage, and visual qualities of the Village
rights-of-way and the Village as a whole.
This article applies to all areas located on, above, along,
upon, under, across, or within the rights-of-way or other public easements
within the jurisdiction.
[Amended 9-27-2023 by Ord. No. 23-058]
Miscellaneous encroachments that include but are not limited
to culverts, retaining walls, landscaping, sprinkler systems, masonry
mailboxes, permanent neighborhood signs and notification signs may
require a permit. The permit acts as a written agreement between the
applicant, the Village of Homer Glen and Homer Township that, in exchange
for permission to use the right-of-way, the applicant will maintain
the encroachment. In addition, the applicant agrees that the Village
of Homer Glen and Homer Township Highway Department are not responsible
for any damage that may occur to the encroachment from snow plows,
utility work, road construction, etc. The applicant agrees that upon
notice the Village of Homer Glen or the Homer Township Highway Department
for good cause (utility work, road construction, hazardous structures,
etc.) the encroachment may have to be removed at no cost to the Village
or Township. The fee structure for permits shall include a fifty-dollar
plan examination fee and a fifty-dollar permit and inspection fee.
[Amended 9-27-2023 by Ord. No. 23-058]
A. Mailboxes are the responsibility of the homeowner and must comply
with the requirements of the United States Postal Service (USPS).
The front of the box shall not extend over the curb and the post shall
be placed firmly in the ground and not cracked, rotted or rusted out.
The box shall be securely attached to the post.
B. A mailbox constructed in whole or in part of brick, stone, masonry,
cinderblock and/or any other mineral substance shall be considered
a "masonry mailbox," and shall require a permit. Masonry mailboxes
shall only be permitted on roads with curbs and a speed limit of 25
miles per hour or less.
Any person violating this article shall be subject to a mandatory
fine of not less than $100 nor more than $1,000; each day that a violation
exists shall constitute a separate offense. Proceedings to enforce
violations of this article may be initiated and conducted in accordance
with and pursuant to the provisions of the Village ordinances providing
for administrative adjudication of Code violations or by any other means provided by law.