Zoning Cases in Crete and Manhattan Townships Postponed to December 16
Will County Planning and Zoning Commission Meeting | November 18, 2025
Article Summary:
Two zoning cases, one in Crete Township and another in Manhattan Township, were postponed by the Will County Planning and Zoning Commission due to a lack of a full quorum. A commissioner’s recusal left only three members available to vote on the matters, one short of the four required to pass a motion.
Postponed Cases Key Points:
-
Crete Township Case (ZC-25-086): A request by Khalid Ghaben for a variance to reduce the rear yard setback from 50 feet to 24.92 feet at 3303 E. Exchange Street.
-
Manhattan Township Case (ZC-25-099): A request by Brittany Kaup for a variance to reduce the animal confinement setback from 50 feet to 28 feet at 24959 Schoolhouse Road.
-
Reason for Postponement: A commissioner recused himself from both cases, leaving an insufficient number of members to hold a valid vote.
-
New Hearing Date: Both cases have been rescheduled for the commission’s meeting on December 16, 2025.
JOLIET, IL – The Will County Planning and Zoning Commission on Tuesday, November 18, 2025, postponed two zoning variance requests after a commissioner recused himself, leaving the body without enough members for a vote.
The first postponed case involved a property in Crete Township. Khalid Ghaben, owner of the property at 3303 E. Exchange Street, is seeking a variance to reduce the rear yard setback from the required 50 feet to approximately 24.92 feet to bring an existing structure into compliance.
The second case was for a property in Manhattan Township. Owner Brittany Kaup is requesting a variance at 24959 Schoolhouse Road to reduce the animal confinement setback on the eastern side of her property from 50 feet to 28 feet to legalize the placement of a pole barn.
Chairman Hugh Stipan announced at the start of the meeting that because one of the four attending commissioners had to recuse himself from both cases, a vote could not be legally held. Will County zoning regulations require a minimum of four votes to approve any case.
Both matters were moved to the commission’s December 16, 2025, agenda. The next regularly scheduled meeting on December 2 was already full.
Latest News Stories
IL can gag charter school operators over teacher unionization, judge says
Consumer advocates, Illinois lawmakers target ‘unnecessary’ utility costs
Large taxpayer costs coming to Indiana or Illinois for new Bears stadium
Trump’s tariffs set to rise to 15% for some countries, Greer says
Clintons to face questions from lawmakers this week over Epstein ties
Auditor general nomination approved unanimously in Illinois
Supreme Court blocks ICE contractor immunity appeal
Report: Patchwork state food laws could raise grocery prices 12% nationwide
Trump calls out Minnesota in State of the Union, prompting Democrat protests
Parents could gain access to school discipline evidence under proposed bill
State of the Union highlighted political fracture between Democrats, Trump
Illinois Democrats dispute Trump statements during State of the Union