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Closer Look: The stories of the year

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Several members of the Elburn board throughout the year expressed concern over the number of apartments, in particular, fearing that many apartments could change Elburn’s “character."

Village officials and ShoDeen also worked out disagreements over the Elburn Station annexation agreement, a legally-binding document that would set the terms under which the project would be built over the next 20 years.

But even after those issues were resolved, the board refused to bring the matter to a vote, for various reasons.

Finally in November, the board voted to put the matter on hold indefinitely.

As December closed, the board indicated it could bring the Elburn Station agreement back for a vote in January, as Trustee Ethan Hastert has reminded the board of the strategic importance of the proposed extension of Anderson Road, which would provide a bypass around the Route 47 railroad crossing in downtown Elburn.

ShoDeen owns the land for that bypass, and has stated its unwillingness to sell the land for the new road to Kane County without an agreement for Elburn Station in place.

Drought conditions

An abnormally hot spring morphed into an abnormally hot summer in 2012.

But the real problem came, not from the strange abundance of heat, but from the dearth of precipitation that accompanied the string of above-normal temperatures that seemed to become the norm in the year past.

In March, temperatures in Kane County and the Chicago area surged to levels rarely seen, with daytime highs of 80-85 degrees, sending many delightfully scurrying to Lake Michigan beaches to enjoy the balmy conditions.

But a novelty of spring stretched into a summer of often oppressive heat and humidity, with the summer recording a record number of days in which high temperatures hit 100 degrees or more, as well as total days in which temperatures stood at 90 degrees or more.

However, along with the heat came a lack of rainfall, producing drought conditions.

Stream flows and lake levels dropped, and fields dried out.

Farmers compared the conditions to 1988, an infamous year of drought for Midwest farmers.

Ultimately, the local corn and soybean crop did suffer, compared the string of more bountiful years the region had enjoyed in recent years. But the total harvest in Kane County did not suffer as much as many had feared - or as much as the crop did in other parts of the state that received even less rainfall than had Kane.


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Reader Poll

What do you think of people using fireworks near their homes?

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