The public hearing last
night before the Watauga County Commission over what to do about land-use
protections in the (former) Boone Extraterritorial Jurisdiction (ETJ) was
lopsided by a wide margin. The vast majority of speakers said they wanted the
county to provide the same protections they had depended on under Boone's
zoning regs before Senator Dan Soucek succeeded in eliminating those
protections.
By my count, only three of
the speakers last night expressed joy that the ETJ had been stripped naked by a
law passed in Raleigh. One of those speakers, Margaret Buck, seemed to tie
land-use planning to the evils of educational standards (Common Core) and
ultimately to a communist plot in the United Nations. Well, okay then.
During a pre-hearing press
conference held by "Citizens for Local Control" (emphasis added ... and, take that, Dan Soucek!) -- a group
formed by residents of the ETJ -- we learned that there are over 2,400 parcels of
land in the ETJ and some 1,500 families.
Residents of Seven Oaks,
Sunny Knolls Acres, Jordan Cook Road, the Locust Hill neighborhood, Snaggy
Mountain, Homespun Hills, and Fieldstream all voiced the same concern and often
said they had bought their homes in the ETJ because
of the zoning protections. They are feeling very exposed and vulnerable
now. Most said that they were not polled or surveyed about what they wanted. One
speaker asked, Who wanted the ETJ destroyed?
As if to answer that
question, up popped Jeff Templeton, who perhaps more than any other individual
had propelled Senator Soucek into his project to eliminate the ETJ. Mr.
Templeton said he thought it was fine for these other neighborhoods to have
some protections, but he doesn't want regulations imposed on undeveloped land
in the ETJ (and you're free to make whatever inferences come to mind). Mr.
Templeton also joined the chorus at the hearing asking for a two-year
moratorium on "polluting" industries while new regs are considered.
By "polluting industries,"
most people seemed to finger a certain concrete plant off Roby Greene Road, and the
Radford Quarries rock crushing operation, and a possible asphalt plant (Radford
Quarries has twice before attempted to install an asphalt plant in the ETJ, both defeated because of Boone's zoning).
County Commission Chair
Nathan Miller, who has lawyered for the concrete plant, did not show up for the
hearing, which was interesting. The meeting was presided over by Vice Chair David Blust.
The whole issue of zoning the ETJ was referred to the Watauga Planning Board, which is tasked with coming up with a plan to be presented to the County Commission. Don't expect any action before the Fall elections.
In the meantime, a moratorium on certain kinds of development while the Planning Board studies the issue is highly doubtful, with the current Republican domination of the County Commish.
3 comments:
JW, then why not conduct a secret ballot referendum of the entire ETJ region on whether the property owners want ETJ to be reinstated? The BOC hearing was primarily for people who were upset with the legislative action against ETJ. Do you really believe that hearing accurately reflected the views of the whole ETJ region?
@Anonymous.
Yes.
Then if and when the referendum vote is held, we will know for sure.
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