Manhattan Residents Voice Fears Over Traffic Safety, Water Use Amid Regional Growth
Manhattan Village Board Meeting | October 21, 2025
Article Summary: Following recent tragedies, residents delivered emotional pleas to the Manhattan Village Board, demanding action on truck traffic and speeding on Route 52, while others raised alarms about the potential impact of a massive new data center in Joliet on local water supplies. The comments highlighted a growing anxiety about the effects of rapid regional development on the community’s safety and resources.
Resident Concerns Key Points:
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A resident whose son was previously hit by a car near her home on East North Street pleaded for more traffic calming measures on Route 52, including better signage and radar signs.
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Another resident expressed fears that a proposed 800-acre data center in Joliet will deplete the groundwater table that Manhattan-area wells rely on.
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Speakers feel the community is being “poached” by large-scale developments like data centers and solar farms, along with heavy truck traffic.
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The board listened to the concerns and agreed to speak with residents after the meeting to discuss the issues further.
Residents brought impassioned concerns about traffic safety and the impacts of regional growth to the Manhattan Village Board on Tuesday, October 21, 2025, just one day after a tragic car accident involving local youths.
Liz Lemur, a resident of East North Street, gave an emotional address, recounting how her own son was hit by a car in front of her home last year. “That moment will forever live traumatic. I can’t imagine these families,” she said, her voice breaking.
Lemur credited the Manhattan Police Department with increasing truck enforcement but said the problem persists, with many truck drivers seemingly unaware of the 65-foot length restriction on parts of Route 52. “My concern is how do we work with the state to get that? Because these trucks can’t be killing our kids,” she said.
She pointed to the rapid speed drop from 55 to 30 mph for traffic entering the village from the east, suggesting many drivers don’t slow down in time. She requested more signage, solar-powered radar signs, or even rumble strips to alert drivers they are entering a town.
Another resident, Andrea Bombart, expressed a broader anxiety that the community is “being poached on many different sides,” citing a large solar development in Wilton Center, heavy truck traffic, and a newly proposed 800-acre data center near the speedway in Joliet.
Her primary concern was the data center’s potential water consumption. “I’m on well, my neighborhood’s on well. I know a lot of Manhattan is on well, and the water consumption that I’ve read about from data centers is massive,” Bombart said. “I worry about the water table going dry.”
She urged the board to pressure Joliet officials to require the developer to fund a comprehensive water study, similar to a $250,000 study recently mandated for a data center project in Yorkville.
Mayor Mike Adrieansen and the board listened to the comments and invited the speakers to stay after the meeting for further discussion. “We hear you,” Adrieansen said. “We will keep fighting to protect the residents as best we can.”
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