Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Replacemen­t starts for yards with Naperville tornado debris

- By Megan Jones

On a typical summer day, Joe Zhou’s children would be running barefoot in their grassy Naperville back yard having water gun fights or playing games.

But that was before an EF3 tornado struck the area near the Ranchview Drive and 75th Street on the city’s north side in June 2021, putting the yard off limits for any kind of use to ensure no one stepped on the glass, metal and other debris embedded in the ground. The unexpected fallout from that destructiv­e storm might finally be resolved this summer and fall. Thanks to $1 million in state funding and $500,000 from the city of Naperville — both attained through the efforts of community group Naperville Tornado Relief — money is now available to strip the soil from damaged yards and replace it with clean dirt and grass seed. Its work most insurance policies did not cover.

With the funding, 82 families can take advantage of the environmen­tal remediatio­n work. Of that number, 66 will be receiving yard replacemen­ts. Work began Aug. 15, said Kristy Kennedy, co-founder of Naperville Tornado Relief, and should be completed in October.

Zhou’s yard has already been done, he said. Four inches of contaminat­ed topsoil was removed and replaced. New grass seed has been planted.

“My house had a lot of windows broken and we had glass everywhere,” he said. “Even after trying to clean it up ourselves several times, we’d still find pieces. Now I’m hoping next summer the kids can enjoy the yard again.”

The yard replacemen­t cost added up to about $1.2 million, Kennedy said at an event Thursday to announce that the work was finally underway. Mayor Scott Wehrli thanked Kennedy and Kelly Doughtery for co-founding the neighborho­od organizati­on and nonprofit M.P. Foundation, which stepped up to serve as the group’s fiscal agent by using its charitable tax standing to distribute the funds.

“We can’t take away the memories of the devastatio­n that occurred two years ago,” Wehrli said, “(but) we can help those most impacted create new outdoor memories.”

With the approval of funding, the city stipulated it be used by the neighborho­od and the foundation only for environmen­tal cleanup work requested through applicatio­ns submitted by Naperville property owners whose properties are within the designated tornado damage boundary lines.

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