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County ready to start Evergreen Village relocation planning

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Children walk to their homes Wednesday in Evergreen Village Mobile Home Park after getting off the school bus. More than 50 kids living in Evergreen Village attend the Sycamore School District 427. (Kyle Bursaw – kbursaw@shawmedia.com)

SYCAMORE – DeKalb County is ready to start the potential two-year process of relocating mobile-home park residents who live in a flood plain.

County officials recently received the $4.2 million federal grant announced six months ago, paving the way for meetings with grant consultants and a chance to craft a rough timeline for relocating the people who live in the 129-unit Evergreen Village Mobile Home Park, 955 E. State St., said Gary Hanson, DeKalb County administrator. The park sits on Sycamore’s east side across from the Sycamore Golf Course.

Hanson said while the county is eager to act quickly to move residents before major flooding that occurred in 2007 and 2008 happens again, officials cannot afford a misstep in the process because it would mean the loss of federal dollars.

“When the federal government gives you money, they put in all kind of stipulations, and we have to make sure we fully understand those before we start,” Hanson said. “We have to be very methodical.”

The mobile-home park is located in a flood plain that has flooded severely twice in the past six years, requiring emergency federal assistance both times. The Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity will provide the additional $1.4 million to complete the $5 million relocation project.

A long administrative process

County officials will meet with grant consultants and representatives from the Federal Emergency Management Agency this month to review the plethora of mandates and stipulations attached to the grant.

The process, which is expected to take anywhere from 18 months to two years, will include public hearings, individual meetings with homeowners in the park and property value updates. It also will include partnerships with the DeKalb County Housing Authority and Sycamore School District 427 to help with the residents’ transitions.

Steering the project will be Paul Miller and his small staff of four in the county’s planning and zoning department. Miller first wants to make sure he understands the process, because the county has never executed a mitigation project of this
size. Then, he’ll reach out to park residents with information, likely in March, Hanson said.

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