Skip to content
Rock Run Preserve —Photo by Chad Merda

On the road to 100 years: How the Forest Preserve District expanded

Spread the love
As the Forest Preserve District approaches its centennial year in 2027 with a total of nearly 24,000 protected acres, it’s a good time to reflect on how the District grew into a countywide system of preserves, trails and visitor centers.

That growth didn’t happen by accident. Early on, the District followed a philosophy of one preserve per township, but by the 1980s and 1990s, it shifted to a more strategic land acquisition approach. Plans were developed to identify priority properties and guide future purchases, with a focus on protecting ecological and cultural resources while providing recreational opportunities for the public.

In the past 25 years, the District has invested $350 million to preserve land, extend trails, enhance amenities and create recreational opportunities for residents. By the time the current 2025-2030 Capital Improvement Project has concluded, that total will have increased to $450 million as state and federal grants are added to revenue from the sale of general obligation bonds.

We recently spoke with three previous Forest Preserve executive directors and current Executive Director Tracy Chapman to learn more about how the District expanded during the past 30-plus years as Will County’s population surged.

Mike Pasteris served as executive director from 1989 to 2007. Marcy DeMauro served from 2007 to early 2016. Ralph Schultz served from 2016 to 2025. Chapman became executive director in May 2025.

From about 3,000 acres when Pasteris started to nearly 24,000 today, the Forest Preserve District has come a long way.

Pasteris: Population boom

Pasteris said early land purchases were shaped by flood control efforts and growing awareness of the importance of water resources and ecosystems. As the county grew, so did demand for more protected land and public amenities.

Resident support led to Board approval of a $50 million bond issue in 1989. And two successful referendums in 1999 and 2005 generated an additional $165 million for Forest Preserve expansion.

“That got us on our way,” Pasteris said. “And that’s when we really started … acquiring the sites that we had identified as much as a decade earlier.”

During that period, the District was able to protect key natural areas across the county, including preserves with rare sandy soils in southern Will County and land along Spring Creek in northern Will County to help safeguard underground aquifers.

Pasteris said he is proud of the District’s commitment to conservation, education and building one of the region’s largest trail networks.

“It’s important to put some of those thoughts about ecological preservation into people’s minds when they are young …,” Pasteris said.

The work must continue, he added.

“They’re not making any more land,” he said. “This is all we have. There are still a lot of unique natural resources in Will County, and I’d like to see us expand further in the future. There are some unique areas that we haven’t even touched on yet.”

DeMauro: Watershed Moments

DeMauro, who began working for the District in 1986, said land acquisition evolved as staff began applying more conservation and biology principles. Instead of evaluating parcels individually, the District started looking at habitat, connectivity, access and long-term management.

They also began evaluating land by watershed characteristics.

“A watershed is basically a piece of land where everything drains to the same spot,” she said. “… We identified key areas that were needed to protect the surface water and the surface hydrology.”

Protecting headwaters became a priority, she said, because it helps manage erosion and improve stream quality downstream.

“We have the headwaters of creeks because that’s where it all starts,” she said. “And if we can control erosion there, we can control the quality of the stream and the habitats from that point going south.”

DeMauro said early mapping efforts — long before modern GIS tools — helped identify key resources such as rare bedrock, sandy soils and aquatic diversity.

“This was before computers and before AutoCAD and GIS,” DeMauro said.

Over time, the District’s land acquisition strategy resulted in a more connected system of preserves.

“I think the fabulous story here is how the staff and the Board in supporting all this have been disciplined in seeing it through,” she said. “Because if you look at the County of Will map now and you look where the forest preserves are, it’s a green infrastructure, it’s ribbons of green throughout the county.”

DeMauro also emphasized that the District’s role extends beyond purchasing land to restoring it, and that referendums and grants helped make growth possible.

“We applied for every grant that we could conceivably apply for,” she said. “Since 1999 when we went for the first referendum to by the time I left in 2016, we had secured approximately $32 million in grants to leverage that money. And I consider that wildly successful because you are adding to the value of the public dollars that we were able to receive.”

Schultz: Connecting the Dots

Schultz said one major evolution over time was moving from isolated preserves to a connected system of greenways and trails that allow people to travel through nature.

“One of my main focuses was on connections and getting people out to the forest preserves,” he said.

He said streams, creeks and rivers help create natural corridors that support both conservation and recreation.

“They naturally create connections and continuity in our landscape,” he said. “And they do the same thing for us as human beings.”

Schultz also credited partnerships with municipalities and other agencies for major trail projects, including Old Plank Road Trail, Veterans Memorial Trail, DuPage River Trail and Rock Run Greenway Trail.

“We wouldn’t have an 8.8-mile greenway on the near west side of Joliet had it not been for the willingness of the City of Joliet to partner with us in the ’90s and early 2000s,” he said of the Rock Run Greenway Trail.

He also pointed to the importance of public education, including the creation of visitor centers such as Four Rivers Environmental Education Center in Channahon and the “wildly” successful Hidden Oaks Nature Center in Bolingbrook.

“We didn’t really have a facility located in the northern part of the county, where the vast majority of our population is,” he said of Hidden Oaks, which the District purchased in 2022. “We always felt if we could get our brand of nature education into the community, we would win and our citizenry would win.”

Schultz said cultural resources such as Riverview Farmstead Preserve in Naperville also play a role in the District’s mission by preserving pieces of Will County’s history.

“You see those buildings on the landscape, and it reminds us of a time when we were a different type of community,” he said.

Ralph credited the voters for approving referendums, Board members who OK’d bond issues and the many grants that supplemented those funds. For many, it came down to a choice between more rooftops or nature and they often chose nature, he said.

“We want to make sure that people have access to open space,” he added. “And to be able to get outside. And even if it’s just driving by on the highway, the fact that it’s not built up with runoff and potential pollution that results from that, that’s a benefit to everyone.”

Chapman: The Future Looks Bright

Chapman said land acquisition and restoration will continue to be supported through bond issues and the District’s Capital Improvement Program. The most recent bond issue, totaling $50 million, was approved by the Board of Commissioners in 2024.

“It gives us the funds and the means to make those projects happen,” she said. “In the last 11 months we were able to acquire over 787 acres through the Capital Improvement Program.”

Chapman said three major purchases were finalized in 2025, including a 495-acre acquisition near Goodenow Grove Nature Preserve, a 241-acre parcel in Custer Township and 38 acres adjacent to Riverview Farmstead Preserve.

“Even though it’s a smaller land acquisition, I like that project because it preserves space in an area where we don’t have a lot of green space left,” she said of the Riverview acquisition.

Looking ahead, Chapman said the District has more than 12,000 acres identified as high-quality land for possible acquisition, with both conservation and recreation considered.

“What we’re really looking at is where those two items collide,” she said. “So, we would like the properties to have recreational benefits but we really want them to be high-quality conservation areas.”

Chapman credited previous executive directors with building the system that exists today.

“Those are big shoes to fill,” she said of her role. “And the other executive directors have accomplished big things with big projects.”

She said the District’s work will continue for generations to come.

“The land we protect today shapes how future generations are going to live and recreate in the forest preserves,” she said.

But none of that is possible without preserving land, she added.

“As green space becomes scarce in Will County, it is our job to acquire as much of it as we can today because once it’s gone, it’s gone.”

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Illinois GOP U.S. Senate candidates point to economy, Trump gains

Illinois GOP U.S. Senate candidates point to economy, Trump gains

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Economic issues are front and center for Republican U.S. Senate candidates in Illinois. Former Illinois GOP Chairman...
DOJ promises release of some Epstein records this week

DOJ promises release of some Epstein records this week

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square The U.S. Department of Justice will comply with a subpoena for records related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein as part of a congressional investigation,...
Book: Foreign countries pose greatest threat to free speech on college campuses

Book: Foreign countries pose greatest threat to free speech on college campuses

By Tate MillerThe Center Square A senior scholar at the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression argues in her new book that the greatest threat to free speech in higher...
Exec Cmte 8.14.25.4

Executive Committee Details Spending of $134 Million in Pandemic Relief Funds

Article Summary: Will County has expended 61% of its $134 million in federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds, with significant investments made in infrastructure, health, and economic development. Officials...
Ohio congressional districts must be redrawn this fall

Ohio congressional districts must be redrawn this fall

By J.D. DavidsonThe Center Square While politics is pushing redistricting efforts in other states, Ohio is under a rule of the people to change congressional maps before the midterm elections....
Treasury sanctions accused Costa Rican drug traffickers

Treasury sanctions accused Costa Rican drug traffickers

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The Trump administration announced sanctions against four Costa Rican drug traffickers and two business entities as part of an effort to crackdown on cocaine. “Costa...
S&P keeps U.S. outlook stable, but says federal finances won't improve

S&P keeps U.S. outlook stable, but says federal finances won’t improve

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square A top-credit rating agency decided to keep its outlook for U.S. credit stable, but said the federal government's financial position "won't meaningfully improve" in the...
Lawmaker criticizes $500 student board scholarships amid lowered K‑12 standards

Lawmaker criticizes $500 student board scholarships amid lowered K‑12 standards

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois student leaders serving on state higher education boards will now receive $500-per-semester scholarships under a...
Mayor Karen Bass's charity skips working Americans, data suggests

Mayor Karen Bass’s charity skips working Americans, data suggests

By Kenneth SchruppThe Center Square Less than 1% of aid recipients from the official charity of the office of Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass reported receiving the earned income tax...
Illinois news in brief: Work begins on $1.5 billion O'Hare expansion; Police catch man accused of road rage, shooting

Illinois news in brief: Work begins on $1.5 billion O’Hare expansion; Police catch man accused of road rage, shooting

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Work begins on $1.5 billion O'Hare expansion A new round of construction has begun at O’Hare International Airport in Chicago. Airline...
Putin, Zelenskyy to meet after 'successful' peace talks with Trump

Putin, Zelenskyy to meet after ‘successful’ peace talks with Trump

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Russia and Ukraine appear to be inching closer to peace, as the two leaders are set to meet after rounds of meetings between President Donald...
WATCH: Dems, GOP battle over CA redistricting

WATCH: Dems, GOP battle over CA redistricting

By Dave MasonThe Center Square Emotions ran high Monday as Democrats and Republicans in Sacramento accused each other of sabotaging democracy before the 2026 mid-term congressional elections. The parties' press...
Trump holds high-stakes peace talks with Zelenskyy, European leaders

Trump holds high-stakes peace talks with Zelenskyy, European leaders

By Caroline BodaThe Center Square President Donald Trump hosted Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, five European heads of state and NATO leaders at the White House on Monday to hammer out...
Newsom files FOIA request on border patrol's appearance

Newsom files FOIA request on border patrol’s appearance

By Jamie ParsonsThe Center Square California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office is submitting a Freedom of Information Act request for details regarding the Trump administration’s decision to send U.S. Customs and...
Soaring utility bills, solar federal tax credit cuts dominate Illinois energy debate

Soaring utility bills, solar federal tax credit cuts dominate Illinois energy debate

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Energy prices and clean energy policy took center stage during a senate energy and public utilities...