Will County Moves to Repeal Obsolete 1972 Fire Hydrant Ordinance
Article Summary: An ordinance from 1972 regulating the placement and specifications of fire hydrants in Will County is set to be repealed after the Ad-Hoc Ordinance Review Committee approved its removal from the county code. County officials explained that the authority for such regulations now rests with local fire districts, making the decades-old county ordinance obsolete and unenforceable.
Will County Ordinance Review Key Points:
-
The committee approved the full repeal of Chapter 52: Water Supply for Fire Equipment.
-
Assistant State’s Attorney Philip Mock explained the county no longer has the statutory authority to regulate fire hydrants.
-
The regulatory power for fire hydrants was transferred to local fire districts by state law changes.
JOLIET, IL – An obscure Will County ordinance regulating fire hydrants that has been on the books since 1972 will be repealed after the county’s Ad-Hoc Ordinance Review Committee voted to scrap it on Tuesday.
The ordinance, Chapter 52 of the county code, outlined minimum standards for water supply, water main sizes, and fire hydrant specifications. However, according to Assistant State’s Attorney Philip Mock, the county no longer has the legal authority to enforce it.
“We no longer even have a statutory authority to regulate this. It’s been given to a different unit of government,” Mock told the committee. He explained that after the ordinance was passed, state law changed to give local fire districts the sole power to approve and regulate fire hydrants in their jurisdictions.
Mock said that in preparing the ordinance for review, he discovered that no one in the county’s Land Use or Health Departments was aware of the ordinance’s existence. After contacting a local fire district, its officials confirmed that the state now tasks them with that responsibility.
“We never repealed it when the law changed,” Mock said.
The committee unanimously approved a resolution to repeal the chapter in its entirety, moving the measure forward to the Executive Committee for final consideration.
Latest News Stories
Crete Township ‘Tiny Home’ Owner Appeals Permit Denial
Will County Finance Committee Forwards 1.75% Compromise Property Tax Levy to Full Board
Board Approves $190,000 Transfer from Working Cash Fund Amid Dissent
Lincoln-Way 210 Receives Clean Audit, Financial Profile Score Downgraded to ‘Review’
Committee Grants Lenox Solar Farm Project Six-Month Variance Extension
Mokena Board Approves 2025 Tax Levy; Municipal Rate Set to Decrease
Speed Limits Lowered in Green Garden and Frankfort Neighborhoods
Engineering Firm Hired for Gougar Road Bridge Replacement
Unpermitted Log Cabin and Stage Prompt Rezoning in Beecher
Mokena Fire District Secures $160,000 in Grants to Replace Hoses and Nozzles
New Lenox to Host Large Pollinator-Friendly Solar Farm
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Mokena Village Board for November 10, 2025