Beecher Village Graphic.1

Hunters Chase HOA Asks Beecher Board for Help With Pond Trespassing

Spread the love

Beecher Village Board Meeting | May 11, 2026

Article Summary: Residents from the Hunters Chase Lakefront homeowners association told the Beecher Village Board on Monday, May 11, 2026, that junior high students are repeatedly trespassing on their private fishing pond, prompting commitments from the village to install additional signage, post social media warnings and have the police chief speak with school officials.

Pond Trespassing Key Points:

  • HOA treasurer Angie Kramer told trustees young people are crossing village property to reach the association’s private pond, which sits adjacent to a village pond.
  • The HOA reported its insurance premiums doubled this year, citing trespass liability as part of the pressure on its budget.
  • The board agreed to consider additional perimeter signage, a Facebook post or pond map distinguishing public from private water, and discussions with the school district.
  • Police already responded to at least one recent incident involving up to 14 youths, including one on a motorcycle reportedly damaging yards.

BEECHER — The Beecher Village Board on Monday, May 11, 2026, heard a public appeal from Hunters Chase homeowners frustrated by what they described as increasingly frequent trespassing on their private pond by groups of junior high students, and committed to a package of village responses ranging from additional signage to school outreach.

Angie Kramer, who introduced herself as a 46-year Beecher resident and a 20-year treasurer of the Hunters Chase Lakefront HOA, told trustees that young anglers are crossing village-owned land and a neighboring vacant lot to reach the association’s private pond, where the fishing is reportedly better than in the adjacent public pond. “News travels fast in the junior high,” Kramer said. “I guess there are a bunch of them that thought they had clearance to come fishing where the fishing is better.”

Kramer said the HOA has posted signage along its own property, including a “no fishing beyond this point” sign on the south side, but that the current notices have not been enough to stop the foot traffic from the public side. She asked the village to install private-property signage at the perimeter where the two ponds meet, so that the line between public and private water is unmistakable.

Insurance and Liability Concerns

Beyond the inconvenience, Kramer told the board the trespassing carries real liability exposure for the 17-residence lakefront association, which owns the pond down to the wet bottom. The HOA’s insurance doubled this year, she said, citing trespass risk as one of the contributing pressures on the association’s budget. “We carry insurance for that reason and that insurance has doubled um this year for different reasons. just insurance in general, but ours ours did double, which takes a big toll on on our our resources,” Kramer said.

Board Response

Trustees and village staff offered a multi-pronged response. Trustees discussed installing three or four additional signs along the perimeter where the public and private ponds meet, going beyond the single “no fishing beyond this point” sign currently posted at one end of the area.

Beyond signage, board members revived an idea to use the village’s social media channels to publicize which of Beecher’s ponds are open to public fishing and which are private. One trustee suggested a Facebook post or village map identifying the status of each pond — an approach that could reduce calls to the police department, which trustees said has already responded to incidents at the location.

The Beecher police chief offered to take the issue directly to school administrators. “We can definitely assist and get the word out to to these kids,” the chief said. “I can even go to the schools school district and have a conversation.”

A resident in the audience told the board police had recently responded to one incident at the pond, with officers reportedly speaking to a group that one trustee said numbered 14, including a youth on a motorcycle described as “ripping up everybody’s yard.”

Kramer noted she had written to the junior high principal years ago about a similar but smaller issue, which she said was addressed at the school level at the time. With the village’s continued growth and the buildout of nearby subdivisions, however, the scale of the problem has changed. “Now with the village being a little bit bigger and of course the subdivision going full blown here, a lot of kids, a lot of energy, and hoping something can be can be rectified here,” she said.

Village President Marcy Meyer said the board would work on more visible signage on village property and on a social media push, while pledging to coordinate with the HOA on its own perimeter postings. The board took no formal vote during the public comment exchange; the response items will move forward administratively.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Chicago mayor says head tax would have prevented deficit

Chicago mayor says head tax would have prevented deficit

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson says his proposed corporate head tax would have prevented his administration’s projected budget...
Former judge Dugan avoids prison, fined $5K for obstruction

Former judge Dugan avoids prison, fined $5K for obstruction

By Jon StyfThe Center Square Former judge Hannah Dugan avoided jail time but was fined $5,000 as she was sentenced on Wednesday for a felony obstruction conviction. Dugan was found...
Food-borne illness cases spike as Michigan declares outbreak

Food-borne illness cases spike as Michigan declares outbreak

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Cases of cyclosporiasis, a food-borne illness, are skyrocketing in Michigan as the state declares it an outbreak. In a typical year, Michigan only identifies around...
Op-Ed: Women deserve protection from the harm of mail-order abortion pills

Op-Ed: Women deserve protection from the harm of mail-order abortion pills

By David Bereit | Life Leadership ConferenceThe Center Square The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has finally begun reviewing the data on the abortion pill mifepristone’s harms to women....
Minnesota woman pleads guilty to threatening state House speaker

Minnesota woman pleads guilty to threatening state House speaker

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square A Minnesota woman has pleaded guilty to threatening Minnesota House Speaker Lisa Demuth after leaving a series of violent voicemails earlier this year. Rachel Marie...
Illinois lawmaker, husband indicted over alleged kickback scheme

Illinois lawmaker, husband indicted over alleged kickback scheme

By Sean ReedThe Center Square An Illinois state representative faces multiple counts of wire fraud and providing a false statement, according to a federal indictment released Tuesday night. State Rep....
Border Patrol warns of rideshare human smuggling risks in El Paso

Border Patrol warns of rideshare human smuggling risks in El Paso

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square U.S. Border Patrol in far west Texas is warning rideshare drivers about human smugglers using rideshare apps to organize illegal smuggling activity. In the U.S....
Illinois Quick Hits: Gas prices show slight uptick as US military action resumes

Illinois Quick Hits: Gas prices show slight uptick as US military action resumes

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinoisans will be watching gas prices after the United States launched new military strikes against Iran on...
Maine Democrats lining up to replace Platner in Senate race

Maine Democrats lining up to replace Platner in Senate race

By Chris WadeThe Center Square Top Maine Democrats are being groomed as replacements for disgraced U.S. Senate candidate Graham Platner, who has yet to abandon his floundering candidacy amid damaging...
Trump: U.S. to 'probably' strike Iran tonight; oil prices rise

Trump: U.S. to ‘probably’ strike Iran tonight; oil prices rise

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square President Donald Trump said the United States will "probably" strike Iran again on Wednesday night, after casting doubt on the ceasefire between the two countries....
Class action vs Apple over Face ID scans seeks to unlock big payout

Class action vs Apple over Face ID scans seeks to unlock big payout

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square Apple has been hit with another class action lawsuit under Illinois' stringent biometrics privacy law, this time accusing the tech giant of...
Another fatal ICE shooting, this time in Houston

Another fatal ICE shooting, this time in Houston

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Another fatal immigration enforcement shooting has occurred, this time in Houston. The victim was a Mexican national in the country illegally, U.S. Immigration and Customs...
Census shows Illinois under-20 population declining faster than national average

Census shows Illinois under-20 population declining faster than national average

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Recently released data from the U.S. Census Bureau revealed Illinois has seen outsized shifts in its population...
U.S. launches 'powerful strikes' against Iran, halts oil sales

U.S. launches ‘powerful strikes’ against Iran, halts oil sales

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The United States on Tuesday launched a "series of powerful strikes" against Iran in response to attacks on three tankers in the Strait of Hormuz....
Trump praises Erdoğan, pressures Europe on NATO and defense

Trump praises Erdoğan, pressures Europe on NATO and defense

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square President Donald Trump remained icy toward key European leaders at the NATO Summit Tuesday, though he had nothing but good things to say about Turkish...