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Fleming Road residents prevail

County Board OKs $692K project that doesn’t widen scenic road

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WOODSTOCK – Residents along Fleming Road officially won their almost 3-year struggle to save their scenic drive from destruction by a much-needed rebuild.

The McHenry County Board on Tuesday evening voted, 22-0, to approve a plan to rebuild the crumbling road starting late spring in its current footprint, saving its rolling hills, centuries-old oaks and daffodil beds from the bulldozer.

The plan, hashed out last year, uses a technique called cold in-place recycling, which grinds up the old road and part of the bed and uses the ground-up material to lay down the new one.

Members of the Fleming Road Alliance, which banded together to stop the county’s original plans for a much wider road, hailed the vote.

“Everyone is winning, whether it’s the residents concerned about preserving the beauty of the road and its natural features while repairing it, and the motorists win because they’ve been concerned about the safety of it. And the taxpayers win,” alliance member Mary Moltmann said.

The County Board awarded the contract to Crystal Lake-based Curran Contracting Co. for $692,506, and added a 20 percent cushion to $830,000 in the event of unanticipated problems. Even then, the cost is far lower than the $5 million price tag, not counting right-of-way acquisition, that the McHenry County Division of Transportation first envisioned.

Officials announced in 2010 their intentions to rebuild the decaying, pothole-filled 2 1/2-mile rural road connecting Route 120 and Country Club Road. Fleming Road was first paved in 1966 and last repaved a decade ago, but the road bed is too far gone to simply pave it again.

However, county plans called for widening the lanes to 12 feet, widening the shoulders to 4 feet, and adding 3-foot ditches and 14-foot clear zones. In short, the road’s footprint would double, and in the eyes of residents, take much of the scenery with it. About a mile and a half of the road also runs through the sensitive Boone Creek Fen groundwater recharge area.

Residents insisted that the road be built in its current footprint, and participated in the advisory group that MCDOT formed to gauge the project’s scope. But residents quickly became frustrated that engineers kept coming back with the same plan, save for minor tweaks.

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