By JEFFERY D. SCHIELKE
On the editorial staff of the Kane County Herald since 1968 covering local government, his family heritage in Batavia dates back to 1849. He has lectured at area colleges on communications and politics.

Beauty and the beast, or how Fermilab and the city of Batavia lived happily ever after

When citizens of Batavia first learned of the Atomic Energy Commission's decision to locate the world's largest nuclear physics research instrument right at their doorstep, there were fears that the town's peaceful tempo of life would he affected. Ten years later, however, Fermilab and Batavia have established a mutual relationship and the fears of the townspeople have diminished

ENRICO FERMI — chances are that few of the citizens of Batavia ever heard of him before December 16, 1966. But the townspeople learned something about this famous nuclear physicist on that date when the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) announced that it would build an accelerator laboratory named after him on a large parcel of land just east of their city. The community reaction was generally favorable, but the prospect of having an atom smasher nearby also raised some fears in the small town. Batavians recognized that a massive federal project like Fermilab would bolster the area economy, but they were concerned that the impact of the world's largest research instrument of high energy physics might alter the peaceful tempo of life in their community and throughout the Fox River area.

The townspeople read in the weekly Herald and the daily Beacon-News that "the scientific prize of the century" was to be built on a 6,800-acre tract of land along the DuPage-Kane county line. They also saw official pronouncements of enormous growth for the rural area surrounding the lab site. Headlines spoke of the accelerator in lavish terms as "the big prize" and a "great boost for Illinois." Historically, the idea of rapid growth has not set well with the majority of Batavians. Citizens of the city (population 11,000) have long accepted the idea that their community was well served by its separation from the urban sprawl which has slowly been moving westward from Chicago. Surrounded by cornfields, forest preserves, the Loyal Order of the Moose "child city" known as Mooseheart and several correctional institutions, residents will argue when someone dares label Batavia a "suburb."

The founding father of the city was an explorer named Christopher Columbus Payne, who came to the area in 1833. Proud of its history, Batavia has long held a social and political philosophy which is genuinely conservative. With many of its families united by marriage, friendship and local traditions, the tightly knit populace has always looked carefully at any idea or event which deviates from the norm. It was into this climate of conservatism and civic pride that the AEC brought "the big prize."

After the announcement, local officials put themselves on guard. Acting on the recommendation of its own planning commission, the city council placed an eight-month moratorium on all zoning in Batavia to allow completion of a new comprehensive citywide plan. The advent of Fermilab was used to support the town's application for federal funds to pay for the plan, and this fact was cited as the first sign of the accelerator's effects. There would be other "effects," but the official groundbreaking at the site on December 1, 1968, went well with Batavia officials among the honored guests.

Boundary arguments
The first real clash between Batavia and lab officials concerned the actual boundaries of the site. Under the leadership of then Mayor Arthur Swanson, Batavia sought to have the western boundary of the lab set along a line east of a fast-developing residential subdivision known as Woodland Hills and a large tract of undeveloped industrial land. The city had recently extended several utilities to the area, including a 500,000-gallon elevated water tank and electrical and sewage substations. Two industrial firms had already located plants in the area and there was a promise of more to come. After some initial fear that the lab would try to come into Batavia's municipal boundary, an agreement was reached which set the line along the route suggested by the

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city. But a small parcel of undeveloped land in the Woodland Hills area was taken by the lab, and complaints echoed that Batavia's taxable land was reduced. Roughly 22 per cent of the fire protection district and approximately one-fifth of the local school district were taken off assessment rolls when they were incorporated within the lab site's boundaries.

Real estate ordinance
The loudest cries of encroachment into local affairs by the lab came in January 1968 when Batavia's city council considered what the Chicago Sun-Times termed "one of the strongest open occupancy ordinances ever proposed in the state." As presented, the ordinance covered all real estate transactions, including the sale by an individual of his own property. Recommendations included in the ordinance had come from the city's own Human Relations Commission headed by then Police Chief Charles Marshall. When city fathers debated the proposal, over 300 citizens attempted to jam into the small council chambers to take part in the discussion.

A rallying point for opponents to the proposal came January 3, 1968, with an appearance at a public hearing on the ordinance by Dr. Robert Wilson, the newly appointed lab director. Wilson urged passage of the ordinance and said such legislation was important to Fermilab. His comments were not received well by those citizens who disliked the ordinance and said, in effect: "Let us decide our own fate. We can handle our affairs without help from Washington or anyone from the outside." The first attempt to pass the measure failed, but six months later when public attention relaxed, a second attempt was successful.

Since adopting the ordinance, Batavia has never once had to resort to the legal procedures provided by the ordinance, and nearly every neighborhood has welcomed minority families with little difficulty. Few minority families have, however, come to town as a result of the Fermilab.

Water rights
The use of the area's water resources was another point on which Batavia and its new neighbor had disagreement. The city questioned the lab's intentions when drilling was started to tap into the domestic water table of the area. Officials feared that domestic water resources would be endangered if they were used for cooling purposes at the lab. Officials at Fermilab pledged that the well water would be used only in "extreme emergencies," and, so far, it appears that the lab is keeping its promise.

There was also spirited discussion concerning a state agreement which allows the lab to withdraw water from the Fox River for cooling at the site. After lengthy negotiations directed by Mayor Robert Brown, who had succeeded Swanson in 1969, the city agreed to allow the lab to build a small pumping station on city property along the river. The lab assured the community that water would be taken from the river only when the water level was high enough to allow a withdrawal without adverse effects. In exchange for the pumping site, the city received a 99-year lease on a corner of the lab property and the option of building a fire station there.

Local highway projects
Rearrangement of the local highway network was another bone of contention. When it was announced that East Wilson Street Road, the principal route leading east from Batavia, was to be closed because it ran through the middle of the lab construction area, citizens objected that it would take a map and compass to find Batavia. A multi-million dollar state highway improvement project on the road network surrounding the lab quickly helped to eliminate complaints. Wilson Street was eventually limited to lab traffic, but it was replaced by an improved road two miles to the north. Known as Fabyan Parkway, the new eastern passage from Batavia provides direct access to Route 38 and West Chicago. A second highway project undertaken was the widening and extension of Kirk Road along Batavia's eastern boundary. Finally, Illinois Routes 25 and 31, which run a north-south course through Batavia, were resurfaced. Philip B. Elfstrom, chairman of the Kane County Board and Batavia's own elected representative to that body, recalls being present at a meeting hosted by then Gov. Richard B. Ogilvie in Springfield when the road improvement work was reviewed. "It was one of the most memorable meeting I've ever attended — to sit in the governor's office and reach that kind of progress to benefit our area," Elfstrom said recently when discussing some of the positive impact that the lab has had on the area.

Removal of taxable lands from local assessment rolls because of the lab has not been as costly as expected. Batavia's School District 101 receives financial aid from the federal government under a program which compensates schools for the new students who move in when a new federal installation is established in a school district. Under provisions of the law (Public Law 874), if a district can show that three per cent of its student enrollment can be attributed to parents employed by the federal government, a Batavia
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One scientist was elected president of the Batavia Rotary Club, and the center of Batavia's high school basketball team this year also comes from a family drawn to the area by Fermilab

subsidy for the impact is provided. With the arrival of families associated with the lab, plus Batavia's proximity to the Federal Aviation Administration Air Control Center at Aurora and other nearby federal installations, District 101 qualified easily for a subsidy. In 1974 the district received $18,013 in federal impact aid.

On May 12, 1974, some eight years after the first announcement, the lab was officially dedicated and is now fully operational. Except for a twin-towered, 16-story office building, the view of the site from Batavia is the same rural landscape which residents knew before they ever heard of the Fermilab.

Batavia's growth pattern
The largest influence of the lab on Batavia is that the town's growth pattern has been stabilized somewhat. Various commercial interests are pressing for the development of the remaining open space under the city's control. But whatever happens, Batavia citizens can take comfort in the fact that eastward expansion has been permanently halted due to the lab. The lab site serves as a buffer zone between the town and the urban sprawl moving west from DuPage County which many Batavians have long viewed with apprehension.

City Engineer William Boyd and Alderman James Hanson (who was chairman of the city council's subcommittee on planning and zoning during the entire lab construction period) both say that control of growth has been the major benefit derived from Fermilab. Boyd believes that the lab has not only helped to stabilize the city's growth pattern, but has helped to prevent a drain on the area water supply and eliminated the traffic problems which residential or business development usually brings. Hanson suggests that the site would have been a prime area for development and that the consequent requests for annexation to the city would have placed a heavy burden on public services. He says there is now more utility capacity in the lab area than will be needed because the lab took over much of the anticipated development land. "The accelerator," Hanson says, "failed to produce much of the development which some thought might occur when it was located here. No one really knew, of course, just how much growth would take place, but I am sure what has come has been a lot less than many people expected." Hanson recalls how early in its association with the lab, the city agreed to allow rezoning of a land parcel in the Woodland Hills subdivision for the construction of a motel and convenience center complex adjacent to the lab's main entrance, but within city limits. Batavia granted the request, but five years later rezoned the parcel back to single-family residential status when no apparent interest in the motel project developed.

A low-key public relations campaign by Fermilab has helped greatly to win friends throughout the area. Lab employees have taken an active role in community affairs. One scientist recently has been elected president of the Batavia Rotary Club. The wife of another lab staff member has served as secretary to the local citizens' advisory committee on the school system, and the center player on Batavia High School's basketball team this year also comes from a family drawn to the area by the lab.

Now, 10 years after the lab was announced, the citizens of Batavia have stopped worrying and have settled into the kind of relationship with Fermilab that should serve as a model for other communities which are concerned with the impact of a new governmental installation.

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