Update October 29, 2021: The Natural Land Institute on Thursday evening that it has reached an agreement with the Greater Rockford Airport Authority to temporarily halt construction activities that would damage Bell Bowl Prairie, and has withdrawn its lawsuit. The airport has agreed to delay the expansion until March 1, 2022, the group reported, allowing time for consultation between the Federal Aviation Administration and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to evaluate how the project will impact the endangered rusty patched bumble bee. Additionally, Thursday that it has amended its plan for the expansion to remove one element, a detention basin, that was to be built in the prairie.
Driving past Bell Bowl Prairie in August, Dan Williams didn鈥檛 expect to see bulldozers. Williams, a local birder, spotted earth movers scraping dirt away from the west end of the roughly 25-acre prairie, a natural area and birding destination in northern Illinois. Concerned, he called the Natural Land Institute (NLI), a local conservation group, and learned they were equally in the dark.
The work was part of an expansion that the Chicago Rockford International Airport, which owns the land encompassing Bell Bowl Prairie, proposed in 2019. But NLI and other local environmentalists say they were blindsided by the construction, despite the group鈥檚 informal role as manager of the prairie since the 1970s. The sighting in August of the federally endangered rusty patched bumble bee on the site brought the work to a halt, but it鈥檚 set to resume on November 1. Now, NLI has filed a last-minute lawsuit to prevent the bulldozers from rolling over the remaining grassland.
鈥淭his action we are taking today would allow for this ancient prairie, a special place that has captured the hearts of so many Americans across the state and the country, time to be reassessed in the spring to determine if the rusty patched bumble bee, a federally endangered creature, is currently nesting in the prairie,鈥 said Kerry Leigh, NLI executive director, in a press conference today announcing the lawsuit. 鈥淲hy is an ancient prairie expendable, and a parking lot so precious?鈥
Illinois, known as the Prairie State, at one time supported of tallgrass prairie. Now, just one one-hundredth of 1 percent remains. It鈥檚 a story that鈥檚 replicated across the country鈥攁bout or other uses since European colonization. Grassland birds, meanwhile, have become some of the country鈥檚 most imperiled, showing the most sustained decline out of all bird groups in North America. These at-risk species include Bobolinks, Northern Bobwhites, and Vesper Sparrows, which have all been reported at Bell Bowl Prairie on eBird.
The airport expansion would make space for more cargo planes, increase parking for employees, create roads, and bring jobs to the region. It would also destroy nearly the entire prairie. 鈥淲ith their plan, they鈥檙e swapping a 10,000-year-old evolved ecosystem for basically a large parking lot and three holes in the ground,鈥 says Domenico D鈥橝lessandro, a retired landscape architect working with NLI to save the habitat. 鈥淭hat, to me, is a tragedy.鈥
Soon after learning about the expansion, NLI got in touch with the Sinnissippi 爆料公社 Society, which helped raise awareness about the construction. These groups held public meetings, and concerned citizens contacted elected officials. The Facebook group, 鈥,鈥 has over 3,000 members.
The seeks to pause construction pending a new environmental assessment for the project. The original environmental assessment, from 2019, wrongly claimed a state endangered wildflower called large-flowered beardtongue was not present, Leigh says, and did not address the presence of the state endangered prairie false dandelion. The suit also says airport officials have failed to consider alternative options that would save the grassland.
The airport said in a statement that its environmental assessment, conducted through the Federal Aviation Administration, is sufficient. 鈥淸The airport] followed all guidelines and rules set forth by the FAA, Federal, state, and local government that are required in order to proceed with any development in the assessment area,鈥 said Zack Oakley, the airport鈥檚 deputy director of operations and planning, in a statement.
Along with the state-protected plants, at-risk bird species in recent years, notably the state endangered Loggerhead Shrike and the state threatened Black-billed Cuckoo. 鈥淲e get birds that we don't see in a lot of other places in the county,鈥 says Rockford birder John Longhenry. Over the years he鈥檚 seen Bell鈥檚 Vireos, Blue Grosbeaks, and migratory Bobolinks there.
But it was a sighting of the bumble bee that temporarily halted construction on close to 5 acres of high-quality remnant habitat. Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR) employees photographed the bee on a site survey, leading to a construction hold until the end of bee foraging season. The lawsuit would allow time for the prairie to be reassessed in the spring for the presence of the bee.
Leigh stresses that NLI is not trying to stop the project altogether, but to find a way to save the majority of the prairie. 鈥淲e're hoping to be able to sit down with the airport and negotiate and come up with an agreement,鈥 she says, 鈥渢hat avoids the prairie but also allows the airport to do its expansion.鈥 D鈥橝lessandro has sketched that he says would accomplish those goals. His concept eliminates the need for a planned 16-acre paved parking lot by suggesting a multi-level garage, for example, and situates the proposed buildings along an existing road, making the planned new road 鈥渞edundant,鈥 he says.
The airport, for its part, has offered one alternative: According to a statement, they have agreed to allow the IDNR to remove state endangered plants and a few other species from Bell Bowl Prairie and move them to another location, though the lawsuit could halt that plan. But activists say that a transplanted prairie won鈥檛 be the same as the original remnant, which has been intact since the retreat of glaciers. 鈥淥ne plant exists because of another,鈥 says Jennifer Kuroda, president of Sinnissippi 爆料公社 Society. 鈥淵ou can't just dig that up and try and grow it somewhere else.鈥
While the foraging bee saved some of the grassland for a few extra weeks, the airport has moved forward with other parts of the plan. The prairie has now been whittled down to only about 14 acres, since they bulldozed some area for a parking lot, prepped drainage systems, and covered some ground to prevent erosion, Kuroda says. And a road has been built right up to the edge of the protected area.
What鈥檚 left might seem insignificant. 鈥淧eople are saying, 鈥業t鈥檚 just a few acres here, it鈥檚 just a few acres there,鈥欌 Leigh says. But with so much grassland habitat already lost, she adds, even small remnants like Bell Bowl Prairie are worth fighting for. 鈥淚 think we鈥檝e compromised enough away.鈥