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Construction of the new plant is expected to begin this fall and is estimated to cost approximately $40 million. (Shutterstock)
WILL COUNTY, IL The Will County Board is being proactive about the environment as it finds ways to convert methane gas produced at the Prairie View Landfill in Wilmington into compressed natural gas.
The board voted Thursday to select SCS Energy to design and build a plant to convert the methane to renewable natural gas. Harbour Contractors from Plainfield will lead the construction piece of this project. Currently, some methane gas is converted into electricity at the landfill with the remainder being burned off.
The Revolution Will Not be Instagrammed
- Flyin Elvis -Utah Chapter - Friday, Jan 15, 21 @ 10:00 am:
The white-washing (pun intended) of last week has only began.
In the coming weeks, months, and years conservatives will have you believe Trump’s rally on Wednesday was simply a picnic, where frisbees were tossed about and hackey-sac was enjoyed by all.
Reading the whole article actually made it seem less awful. Two guys attending a rally that didn’t participate in the riot and didn’t feel incited to riot.
- Lester Holt’s Mustache - Friday, Jan 15, 21 @ 10:09 am:
Eh, I wouldn’t have gone but it seems like the prison guards left before the terrorists were let loose on the Capitol. I think folks committed that much to trump are nuts, but it wasn’t illegal or against DOC rules for them to go. And the Register-Mail wants to sell newspapers (if that is still a thing?) and get clicks, after all - it shouldn’t be surprising that they would run these types of stories, o
Looking back at 2020′s top news stories in the Southland chicagotribune.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from chicagotribune.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Restaurant owners who have been impacted by the pandemic and do not pay their permit fee by Dec. 31 will not be charged a late fee. (Shutterstock)
JOLIET, IL – Restaurant owners in Will County who have been impacted by the coronavirus pandemic and do not pay their permit fee by Dec. 31 will not be charged a late fee, officials announced Tuesday.
The Will County Board of Health has passed a revision to the Will County Health Department Food Ordinance that will postpone late fees for food operators. Anyone not paying their regular fee will be considered operating without a valid food permit and will need to cease operations until it is paid in full, said WCHD Environmental Health Director Tom Casey in a prepared statement. Only food operators operating without a permit after March 1 will be assessed the late fee.
In this year’s installment of its annual Highway Boondoggles report, U.S. PIRG Education Fund and Frontier Group warn of billions of dollars in proposed spending on unnecessary highway projects that would divide our communities, deprive transit of scarce funds, and pollute our air and water. Below is the third of seven installments detailing these harmful projects.
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Illinois officials have budgeted $206 million for a new interchange on I-57 that would take drivers onto a road through undeveloped farmland 44 miles south of Chicago in Will County, Illinois. The project has been deemed “The Exit to Nowhere” by the Illinois Policy Center, as the destination of the proposed interchange is an unbuilt airport which itself is an object of controversy. The project also represents a large unnecessary cost at a time when key local transportation priorities are in desperate