Beecher Village Graphic.2

Beecher Resident Reports Repeated Basement Flooding Along Woodward Street

Spread the love

Beecher Village Board Meeting | June 22, 2026

Article Summary: A Woodward Street resident told the Beecher Village Board on June 22 that her basement had flooded three times in a single week, but village officials said line testing and a 2023 state environmental review had identified no fixable cause on village-owned infrastructure.

Woodward Street Flooding Key Points:

  • A resident said water has repeatedly backed up into her basement and that at least six homes in her neighborhood have the same problem during heavy rain.
  • Village staff said sanitary and storm sewer lines were televised and the Illinois EPA was involved in 2023, with no village-side cause found.
  • Officials attributed the flooding to topography and exterior groundwater saturation, noting the alley behind the homes sits higher than the houses.
  • Village President Marcy Meyer pledged further investigation and urged affected residents to formally log complaints with Village Hall.

BEECHER — A resident of the 600 block of Woodward Street urged the Beecher Village Board on Monday, June 22, 2026, to do something about recurring basement flooding she said has affected her home and her neighbors for years, only to be told that village testing and a state environmental review had found no problem the village can fix on its own infrastructure.

The resident, who identified herself as Rayanne James, told trustees during the audience-comment portion of the meeting that she has “had water in my basement three times in one week.” She said the water comes up through her sewer pipes even though plumbers who inspected the lines found nothing wrong, and described living in fear of leaving home when rain is in the forecast. “I’m afraid to leave my house,” she said, for fear of returning to a flooded basement.

James said the problem is not hers alone. She told the board that six homes in her immediate area have flooded, including one where a neighbor installed multiple pumps, and that a resident in the 500 block of Woodward Street reported the same backups during recent storms. She said the worst flooding came during heavy rains roughly two weeks earlier, on a Monday and a Thursday, and that any storm dropping more than two inches tends to cause problems.

A village public works official, referred to in the meeting only as Matt, said the village has already exhausted its options. He said the sanitary and storm sewer lines were televised — with a copy of the results provided to James — and that the Illinois EPA was involved in the matter in 2023. The testing turned up no village-side cause, he said.

The official pointed to the property’s own conditions and the area’s terrain as the likely sources. He noted that James has a partial dirt floor and a standpipe in her basement, and that water enters through the dirt floor section when the pipe is in place. “That right there tells us that it’s something on the exterior of the home,” he said, adding it has “nothing really, per se, to do with the village infrastructure itself.” Water entering from below, he said, indicates saturation in the soil around the house.

Officials said the topography compounds the problem. The alley behind the homes sits higher than the houses and drains toward them, the official said, and re-grading the alley would not change the fundamental slope of the area, which falls toward a nearby creek that serves as the lowest point. Meyer said she would look into whether a larger drain near the alley could help and asked staff to investigate further and propose a possible plan.

Officials Urge Residents to File Formal Complaints

Much of the exchange turned on getting flooding incidents on the record. Meyer told James that informal reports — including the Facebook messages the two have exchanged — do not create an actionable record the village can act on. “If there’s five other people that had flooding, we know nothing about it unless they let us know,” Meyer said. She urged residents to call Village Hall, send an email, or leave a voicemail, which she said is converted to email and logged, so the village has a documented history of complaints. James said she would spread the word among her neighbors.

The age of the home also limits possible fixes, officials said. James said the house dates to the 1800s and has no drain tiles, and that contractors have been unable to excavate along the foundation because they cannot guarantee the structure’s stability. Meyer thanked James for coming and said the matter would receive further review.

No formal action was taken on the issue, which was raised during public comment rather than as an agenda item.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.08.10 PM

Will County Considers Relaxing Size Restrictions on Accessory Dwelling Units

JOLIET — Will County officials are considering revisions to zoning regulations that would allow larger accessory dwelling units (ADUs), potentially expanding housing options in the county while addressing concerns about...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.08.10 PM

Resident Urges County to Restrict Residential Motocross Tracks After Neighborhood Dispute

JOLIET — A Will County resident appeared before the Land Use and Development Committee Thursday urging officials to modify zoning codes to prohibit motocross tracks in residential neighborhoods, citing an...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.08.10 PM

Committee Approves Truck Terminal Special Use Permit After Safety Modifications

JOLIET — The Will County Land Use and Development Committee voted Thursday to approve a special use permit for a truck terminal in New Lenox Township, after the applicant made...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.08.10 PM

County Committee Approves Two Solar Energy Projects Despite Farmland Concerns

JOLIET — The Will County Land Use and Development Committee approved two commercial solar energy projects Thursday, advancing the proposals to the full county board for final consideration despite concerns...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 3.03.49 PM

Will County Approves Vision Zero Initiative to Reduce Traffic Fatalities

Will County has officially adopted Vision Zero, a data-driven safety initiative aimed at eliminating traffic fatalities throughout the county. The Public Works and Transportation Committee unanimously approved the resolution, which...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 3.03.49 PM

County’s First Roundabout Planned for Exchange Street and Beecher Road Intersection

Will County's first roundabout is advancing to the final public meeting phase, with construction tentatively scheduled for 2027. County Engineer Jeff Ronaldson announced that the Department of Transportation will hold...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 3.03.49 PM

County Accepts $377,000 Developer Donation for Romeo Road Improvements

The Will County Public Works and Transportation Committee has accepted a $377,000 donation from a developer to fund roadway improvements at the southeast corner of Romeo Road and Weber Road...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 3.03.49 PM

Contracts Awarded for LED Signal Upgrades and Guardrail Maintenance

The Will County Public Works and Transportation Committee has approved contracts for two significant infrastructure maintenance projects: LED traffic signal upgrades and guardrail maintenance across the county. A contract for...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 3.03.49 PM

BRIEFS: Will County Public Works Projects

County Line Road Resurfacing Contract Awarded: The committee approved a $767,249 contract to Iroquois Paving Corporation for resurfacing County Highway 58 (County Line Road) from N5000 East Road east to...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.36.35 PM

County Approves Two Solar Energy Projects, Committee Discusses Zoning Challenges

The Will County Land Use and Development Committee approved two commercial solar energy projects Wednesday despite objections from the Village of Manhattan regarding one of the proposals. In a 6-1...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.36.35 PM

Committee Debates Easing Size Restrictions on Accessory Dwelling Units

Will County's Land Use and Development Committee is considering changes to its accessory dwelling unit (ADU) regulations that could provide more flexibility for homeowners looking to create additional living spaces...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.36.35 PM

“Tiny Homes” Status Creates Regulatory Confusion for County Officials

Will County officials are struggling to establish clear regulations for "tiny homes," with committee members expressing confusion over terminology and appropriate standards during Wednesday's Land Use and Development Committee meeting....
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.36.35 PM

County Officials Begin Exploring Regulations for Small Modular Nuclear Reactors

Will County is beginning to explore potential regulations for small modular nuclear reactors (SMRs) after recent Illinois legislation allowed their development, planning staff told the Land Use and Development Committee...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.17.47 PM

Will County Land Use News Briefs

Truck Terminal Proposal Tabled for Traffic Study: The committee tabled a special use permit request from Litmax Multi-Service Inc. for a truck terminal in New Lenox Township at 22645 Cherry...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.57.14 PM

County Moves Forward with Veterans Building Renovations, Questions Arise on Pace Building Plans

Will County's Capital Improvements Committee received updates Tuesday on multiple county facility projects, including progress on the Copperfield Drive building renovations for veterans services, while discussions revealed questions about the...