Citizen Portal
Sign In

Get Full Government Meeting Transcripts, Videos, & Alerts Forever!

McHenry County panel debates raising impervious-area exemption, advances plan for a ‘simplified method’ tool

McHenry County Technical Advisory Committee · March 5, 2026
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

County staff presented analyses showing why keeping a half-acre trigger may be safer than a blanket 1-acre exemption and proposed a GIS-based "simplified method" to let landowners estimate runoff without routine engineering. The committee asked staff to refine curve-number tables and bring a draft tool back for review.

Staff member (S1) presented a draft approach to McHenry County’s stormwater ordinance on March 5, proposing a county "simplified method" and asking whether the current half-acre exemption for impervious-area review should be raised to 1 acre for large agricultural parcels.

The staff member framed the discussion around two example analyses — a 2-acre tributary example and a 77-acre parcel — and said the simplified method would let users derive a time of concentration and a rational-method C value from conservative curve-number choices. "The half acre is probably best," the staff member said, arguing that a blanket 1-acre exemption could capture more storm durations and trigger additional flood-risk analysis.

Committee members pressed technical points about converting TR-55 curve numbers into rational-method C-values and whether those conversions are consistent across soil types…

Already have an account? Log in

Subscribe to keep reading

Unlock the rest of this article — and every article on Citizen Portal.

  • Unlimited articles
  • AI-powered breakdowns of topics, speakers, decisions, and budgets
  • Instant alerts when your location has a new meeting
  • Follow topics and more locations
  • 1,000 AI Insights / month, plus AI Chat
30-day money-back on paid plans