|
Soucek |
It's all about gravity,
isn't it? At this moment in North Carolina history, all the gravitational pull
is in Raleigh, and our Republican representatives down there, Sen. Dan Soucek
and Rep. Jonathan Jordan, are learning the giddy pleasures of stomping all over
smaller entities who have relatively less power.
Decentralized government?
Naw, not on their watch. The town of Boone will be crushed by Bigger Government.
Resistance is futile.
Watauga County Commission
Chair, Republican Nathan Miller, and his 3-2 majority on that governing board
had already explored the joys of crippling Boone's ability to survive by
depriving the town of $2 million in sales tax revenue, and they did it out of
pure spite. That action by Chairman Miller and the subsequent action by
Soucek/Jordan were both prompted by the towering desires of one family, the
Templetons, who are now running virtually everything, from the local Republican
Party to the County Commission to the General Assembly.
Sir Isaac Newton
propounded the universal law of gravitation, and he also mucked about with
force, mass, and acceleration, but the Newtonian Law that is about to come into
effect for Soucek/Jordan and the Templetons is his Third Law: For every action,
there is an equal and opposite reaction.
Reaction # 1: Homeowners in the ETJ Cry Out
Without the protections of
Boone's Unified Development Ordinance, which governs what can be built, where,
and how, the residents of Boone's Extraterritorial Jurisdiction (ETJ) are now
exposed to harm from their neighbors, if their neighbors are of a mind to harm
them.
This new reality
apparently prompted County Commission Chair Nathan Miller to issue a statement on behalf of the Commission majority (which includes a Templeton son-in-law)
that the Commission will hold a public hearing for residents and for
property-owners in the ETJ, to see what, "if
any,
restrictions the citizens and real property owners wish imposed upon them by their elected officials."
That's
a direct quote from Mr. Miller's statement, with emphasis added where emphasis
was obviously intended. In fact, the entire first paragraph of Mr. Miller's
statement is nothing but full-throated crowing over the way the town of Boone
has been treated. Mr. Miller is already abundantly on the record as being
opposed on ideological grounds to most if not all land-use regulations, and his
statement that a public hearing will be called to consider land-use regulations
is also a signal that only one sort of testimony is going to be listened to.
We'll
see how the homeowners in the ETJ get on with their new masters.
Reaction #
2: Boone Residents Cry Out
The
question of the hour: Why should Boone taxpayers now pony up many millions of
$$ to acquire, build, and develop new water resources to service the Templeton
family's ETJ holdings?
It
was always ultimately about the water.
Big
developers want it. Big developers intend to get it. Hell, they have a
power-hungry General Assembly in place to help them seize it.
But
the taxpayers of the town of Boone do not
have to build it for them. They would be fools to do so now.
As
always, Senator Dan Soucek gets the Out-to-Lunch Award: "Water? There's an
issue with water? Why didn't someone tell me?"
Reaction # 3
(and beyond): Who the Hell Knows?
|
Eggers |
The Soucek/Jordan bill to
deprive Boone of its ETJ powers is a one-off. No other town in North Carolina
history has ever been treated this way. The bill opens a legal can of worms.
Let those worms of unintended consequences wiggle! We're sure that County
Attorney Four Eggers can handle every one of them!