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AGENDA ITEM 5F <br />STAFF ORIGINATOR: John Powell, City Engineer <br />DATE: August 3, 1999 <br />TOPIC: Public Hearing — First Reading, Ordinance No 17 -99, Easement <br />Vacation, Oak Brook Peninsula. <br />VOTE REQUIRED: 415 Vote Required <br />BACKGROUND: <br />The specific action requested by Russell D. and Elizabeth M. Melton, the owners of Lot <br />2, Block 1, Oak Brook Peninsula, is the vacation of a portion of the City's drainage and <br />utility easement which contains a hockey rink which the Melton's have constructed. <br />The specific area requested includes not only the hockey tank but also the area parallel <br />to, and within 12 feet of, the rink. <br />The entire area of the drainage and utility easement on this lot as indicated on the plat <br />is about 22,100 square feet (SF). Of this total area, about 16,500 SF were intended to <br />be used as compensatory flood storage based on the location of the 912 contour shown <br />on the original grading plan. The resident of Lot 2 is requesting that the City vacate <br />about 3,500 SF of the easement. This would result in about 20% of the flood storage <br />area being vacated. For your information, the existing open water pond which has been <br />constructed has an area of about 6,000 SF. <br />A review of the file for the Oak Brook Peninsula project indicates the drainage and utility <br />easement on Lot 2 was dedicated for at least three purposes. The narrow portion at <br />the northwest end of the property contains a storm sewer outlet to convey roadway <br />runoff from Otter Lake Dnve to a pond area The easement also contains space for a <br />30 foot by 30 foot "wet" pond. The pond would help control the rate of runoff to Otter <br />Lake and provide a settling basin for sedimentation from the roadway. The majority of <br />the area contained in the easement was dedicated to provide compensatory flood <br />storage adjacent to Otter Lake. The Rice Creek Watershed rules required that "no fill <br />may be placed below the 100 -year flood elevation unless compensatory storage is <br />provided". This requirement is necessary to ensure the capacity of the lake to store <br />flood waters is not reduced by filling activity. The grading of the subdivision required a <br />certain amount of fill be placed below the °100 -year Level so the developer was required <br />to excavate a like volume elsewhere along the Lakeshore. <br />