Village Board Grants Rare Building Code Exemption for Residential Deck Railing
New Lenox Village Board of Trustees Meeting | March 9, 2026
Article Summary: Following a permitting error by the Village’s previous building inspector, the New Lenox Board granted a waiver allowing a local homeowner to keep an installed cable deck railing that violated a local anti-climbing ordinance.
Deck Railing Exemption Key Points:
-
Permitting Error: The Village incorrectly issued a building permit for a rear deck railing at 237 Deerfield Court that conflicted with a local code amendment.
-
Safety Debate: Local ordinance prohibits horizontal railings that could create a “ladder effect” for children, though the installed cable railing complies with the International Residential Code.
-
Legislative Review: Mayor Tim Baldermann suggested the Village review its local amendment to see if an exception specifically for flexible cable railings is warranted.
The New Lenox Village Board on Monday, March 9, 2026, unanimously approved a building code waiver for a property at 237 Deerfield Court, resolving a permitting mistake made by a former Village employee while sparking a broader debate over modern residential safety standards.
Community Development Director Robin Ellis reported that the Village’s previous Chief Building Inspector incorrectly issued a permit for a deck project featuring a horizontal cable railing. While the railing complies with the International Residential Code (IRC), it violates a specific local New Lenox amendment prohibiting horizontal railings that could create a climbable “ladder effect.”
The error was not caught until the deck was fully constructed and the homeowner called for a final inspection. Ellis noted that the current Chief Building Inspector recommended granting the waiver so as not to punish the homeowner for the Village’s mistake, but strongly cautioned against amending the code to allow horizontal railings village-wide.
Mayor Tim Baldermann formally apologized to the homeowner and the fence installer, Mike Mitchell, who attended the meeting.
Mitchell argued that the railing should not be considered a safety hazard.
“Cable rail in general had a small living time in the IRC from 2001 to the end of 2001. Then they took it out [of the code’s prohibited list],” Mitchell told the Board. “They realized that cable railing was not climbable… There’s a lot of talk or thought about the fact that you could climb something that’s horizontal, but they found that cable in general is not something that kids climb.”
Mitchell added that the specific railing installed is produced by a publicly traded company and that he has never seen the product rejected by other municipalities in recent years.
Mayor Baldermann noted that if the product is widely sold and approved under international codes, the Village might need to update its archaic local amendments rather than relying on waivers.
“If this is a product that’s sold and put on homes everywhere, we just maybe have not changed our code to meet with that, then that’s a discussion that we’d rather have internally,” Baldermann said. “I just, if it’s unsafe, then I’d rather see the Village try and do something to make the homeowner whole as opposed to have something that’s unsafe.”
Trustee Bryan Reiser agreed that cable railings possess fundamentally different physical properties than rigid wooden or metal horizontal fences.
“The cable railing is much different than a solid horizontal picket,” Reiser said. “The cable railing’s got some movement. It’s tough to try to climb, and I imagine that’s probably why it’s allowed in most codes. I would not recommend changing the ordinance to allowing horizontal, but maybe an exception for cable rail.”
The Board approved the waiver 4-0, allowing the homeowner to keep the deck as built. Baldermann directed staff to bring the current Chief Building Inspector to an upcoming work session to formally review whether the Village should permanently amend the code to exempt cable-style systems.
Latest News Stories
Land Use Committee Advances Mokena Scrap Yard and Homer Glen Landscape Business Over Local Objections
District 210 Reports Insurance Deficit Amid National Healthcare Cost Spikes; Finances Remain Stable
Foxx to face questions about murder conviction review ‘investigations’
Illinois Quick Hits: North Chicago manufacturing expansion announced
Local government advocates oppose Pritzker plan to cut distributions
New Lenox Fire District Exploring Land Swap with Village for New Training Facility
WATCH: Illinois diversity leaders dodge questions as they slip farther from goals
Illinois Quick Hits: Road fund could help renovate Soldier Field
Planning Commission Backs 5-MW Peotone Solar Farm; Developer Pledges Pollinator Habitat and Community Funds
Joliet Junior College Board Approves $2 Tuition Increase Amidst Heated Debate Over Enrollment and Spending
New Lenox District 122 Kicks Off 2026-2027 Budget Cycle, Approves Minor Registration Fee Increase
New Lenox Park District Outlines Aggressive 2026 Development Plan, Addresses Crossroads Sinkhole
New Lenox Library Explores Rebranding Ahead of 25th Anniversary on the Commons
Lincoln-Way Board Ratifies Three-Year Support Staff Contract with Significant Hourly Raises