Orange County NC Website
28 <br />EXCERPT FROM MINUTES OF JOINT PUBLIC HEARING, FEBRUARY 22, 1999 <br />ORANGE COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS AND ORANGE COUNTY PLANNING BOARD <br />ITEM D.2. Comprehensive Plan Amendment <br />a) CP -1 -99 Apex Northwest Partnership <br />This item was presented by Planner Don Belk for the purpose of receiving public <br />comment on a proposed amendment to the Land Use Element of the Comprehensive Plan. Mr. <br />Belk stated that the Land Use Plan is a part of the County's Comprehensive Plan. It guides the <br />County's policies on growth, establishes land use goals and objectives and seeks to influence <br />the location and pattern of development. The Zoning Ordinance provides for changes to the <br />Land Use Element and Land Use categories in.the following situations: <br />• because of changed or changing conditions in a particular area or areas of the county, or <br />• to correct an error or omission in the Land Use Plan, or <br />• in response to a change in polices, objectives, principals or standards governing the <br />physical development of the County. <br />The applicant, Apex Northwest Partnership, submitted an application to amend the Land Use <br />Plan. The property proposed for the amendment lies in Hillsborough Township, north of <br />Hillsborough between NC 86 and NC 57 and north of Rocky Lane (SR 1622). It is also west <br />and north of the Mars Hill Baptist Church property. The property is currently undeveloped and <br />contains two (2) tracts totaling 390 acres. The larger tract is owned by Apex Northwest <br />Partnership and is 313 acres in size. On the southern portion of the property is a tract owned <br />by Eva Brown and Wayne Powell and it contains 78.11 acres. There is a significant portion of <br />this property that lies within the existing Rural Industrial Activity Node which is focused on the <br />intersection of Coleman Loop Road and NC 86. A Plan Amendment was approved in January <br />1985 which extended the 10 -Year transition area into the southwest quadrant of this activity <br />node. Eighty -five (85°x6) of the Powell and Brown tract lies within this Land Use Plan category <br />and 15% of the Apex Northwest Partnership tract lies within that plan category. The property, <br />for the most part, is zoned for Agricultural- Residential (AR) which permits residential uses at a <br />density of 1 unit per acre or a minimum lot size of .92 acres. This amendment to change this <br />area to a 10 -Year Transition Area could possibly result in an extension of urban services which <br />would impact the rural Industrial Activity Node. Ultimately, because of the higher density uses <br />that would be permitted with a 10 -Year Transition Area that could necessitate another change <br />to the Land Use Element to change the Rural Industrial Activity Node to a higher intensity <br />classification such as a Commercial Industrial Transition Activity Node. A 10 -Year Transition <br />Area is described in the Land Use Element as land located in areas that are in the process of <br />changing from rural to urban and are suitable for urban densities and located in an area that <br />should be provided with public utilities and services within the first 10 -Year phase of the plan. <br />The Amendment proposed by Apex Northwest in their application would expand the 10 -Year <br />Transition Plan category to land currently designated as Agricultural Residential and Rural <br />Industrial Activity Node. It would also allow the potential rezoning of property to higher density <br />residential uses in the future. Changes to the Land Use Categories require comparing the <br />proposal with criteria to determine the suitability of certain locations to contain certain land <br />uses. The land use categories help the Commissioners to make decisions about the most <br />appropriate distribution of land throughout the County. Requests to change the location of land <br />use categories require that the proposed change be filtered through the locational criteria in <br />order to evaluate the suitability of the area which contains potentially different land uses. That <br />determination is the most important step in the analysis of an amendment to change the land <br />