Orange County NC Website
53 <br /> Previous zoning changes have already affected my property,through the arrival of a company <br /> offering"concrete and asphalt recycling." We have also watched as a small mountain of fill dirt has <br /> grown alongside and beneath the power high lines. These are occasional, sometimes continuous, <br /> intense noise pollution caused by heavy earth-moving equipment. Sounds like gun shots, as dump <br /> trucks slam their tailgates, and the noise of engines and backup warning signals of other heavy <br /> earthmoving equipment not only lowers our property values, but it degrades the quality of life for all <br /> near this designated"light industrial"zone. <br /> Also, in recent years,we have observed many changes along the section of Stoney Creek that runs <br /> through our property, and none of them were good. We have seen greater sediment loan from <br /> upstream, increased water turbidity, more frequent and more severe flooding and much more erosion <br /> from the creek banks. The new mountain of earth and recent tree-clearing in the power line right-of- <br /> way,within 100 meters upslope from the creek, is likely to exacerbate this. We feel that the further <br /> proposed changes can only continue to have a similar negative impact on Stoney Creek. <br /> Further development such as you are proposing, of areas draining immediately into Stoney Creek, <br /> will create additional opportunity for sheet runoff,flooding, and point source pollution. This will further <br /> degrade wildlife habitat, destroying aquatic plants,fish, amphibians, mollusks, and crustaceans. <br /> These are essential components of a health ecosystem. As the stream health declines, surrounding <br /> habitat also declines. Currently this habitat supports deer and other mammals and a great variety of <br /> birds, including wild turkeys. <br /> Stoney Creek leaves our land,flows north beneath Hwy 70, and enters the Eno at the Eno River <br /> State Park. Ecosystems do not stand alone;they are interconnected. Further degradation of water <br /> quality, land, and wildlife habitat along Stoney Creek, by connection also affects the Eno River, Falls <br /> Lake Reservoir, and the Neuse River. Various agencies and entities are entrusted with protection of <br /> watersheds and stewardship of North Carolina's resources on behalf of the state's citizens. As an <br /> example,the Stoney Creek Wildlife Corridor was designated for low-intensity use and connects the <br /> Eno River State Park to Duke Forest(Reference: Stoney Creek Basin Small Area Plan: Chapter 3, <br /> Pages 12-13—approved by the Orange County Board of Commissioners on August 5, 1996). <br /> I can understand the need for controlled development. I can understand the need to expand county <br /> and city tax bases. What I cannot understand is promoting those goals at the sacrifice of important <br /> life-giving ecosystems—particularly our watershed system. I implore you to reconsider the changes <br /> that you propose and to furthermore restrict commercial activities directly adjacent to drainage into <br /> Stoney Creek and the Eno River. Such activities damage essential and protected watershed <br /> ecosystems and, by extension, are detrimental to all citizens of the state. Please take this <br /> recommendation under advisement prior to approving irreversible development in this ecologically <br /> sensitive area. <br /> "Environmental Responsibility in County Government"adopted as an Orange County Goal, <br /> December 5, 2005 is laudable. The goal statement reads as follows: "Perform all County <br /> governmental functions, both internal and external,with a sensitivity and ethic that promotes <br /> environmental responsibility and leadership, and an understanding of the actions of government <br /> activities as they affect the natural and cultural resources of the County, region, state, nation, and <br /> world." <br /> Because I must be out of town on business February 27, 2012, I cannot attend the second meeting. <br /> Therefore, in lieu of my in-person comments, I ask that you please enter this letter, imploring you to <br /> reconsider your proposed plan, into the meeting minutes. <br />