During commissioner reports, a member raised a resident concern about a homeowner adjacent to the Oswego Township Cemetery who was told she could not pave a 53-foot-by-12-foot parking area in front of her house and was not informed about the option to apply for a variance.
The commissioner said the homeowner contacted Public Works and was initially told to proceed; after signing a contract with a paving company she received a staff email saying the proposed parking area was considered a driveway and exceeded permitted dimensions (maximum driveway width 20 feet; apron flare maximum 3 feet on each side). The homeowner was told the submittal did not meet driveway and apron standards. The commissioner said staff’s written response did not tell the resident she could still file a variance application and that, as a result, the homeowner did not pursue the variance.
A staff member responded that a variance can be applied for and, if submitted, it would be brought before the planning commission and village board. Staff added that they commonly advise petitioners whether staff would recommend approval because applicants use that information to decide whether to proceed, and noted application fees are nonrefundable. Several commissioners said the case was not handled well and recommended clearer standard language for responses to homeowners that explains the option to apply for a variance even when staff advice would be to not recommend approval.
The commission did not take formal action; the matter was raised as an informational concern and to request improved communication to residents.