Orange County NC Website
James Carnahan: I have been sworn in. I'm a resident of Carrboro and a designer. I'm going <br /> to briefly talk about some more lengthy comments and analysis, and I'm going to give to you two <br /> documents. The first one is an Op Ad written and endorsed by the Board of Directors of The <br /> Village Project, a non-profit in Carrboro, North Carolina. The remainder of material is entitled, <br /> "Assessing Buckhorn Village in the Context of Global Warming." Basically, this is asking you all <br /> first to find out, either from staff or from the applicant what will be the vehicle miles traveled, <br /> what will be the carbon emissions impact of this project. I think that is fairly easy to determine <br /> with GIS and other data. The applicant estimates something like 46,000 daily trips in and out of <br /> this development. We are being asked to consider and build this kind of a project that would be <br /> primarily automobile dependent, because we don't have any public transportation down by 1-85, <br /> at a time when the message about global warming and climate change is becoming more and <br /> more ominous. So, the bulk of the material that I have prepared here, first of all talks about <br /> some of the consequences of global warming, and second, talks about the fact that many of <br /> these consequences are accelerating to the extent that James Hanson, who is the NASA <br /> scientist who first started talking about wanting to establish an upper limit for concentrations of <br /> carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, recently wrote that the limit needs to be reduced to 350 parts <br /> per million. We are already at 380 parts per million. We need to have this information A and B. <br /> I think it is a concern that we're being asked to approve this based on a pretty outdated <br /> comprehensive plan, very outdated guidelines for the economic development districts, and also <br /> we have not completed the carbon inventory for the County much less established guidelines <br /> and standards for achieving some kind of carbon reduction in the County. Given the gravity of <br /> what former U. S. Vice President Al Gore calls the Global Climate Emergency, and given that <br /> the County's planning ordinances do not now effectively address the urgent need to reduce <br /> CO2 emissions, approval of the Buckhorn Village application at this time is not in the County's <br /> interest. The accumulation of knowledge about CO2 and climate change in conjunction with the <br /> significant increase in CO2 that Buckhorn Village would produce indicates that this project <br /> would pose a threat to the health, safety, and welfare to the people of Orange County and <br /> beyond." <br /> Glendel Stephenson (Mayor of Mebane): I have been sworn in. I am here tonight to support <br /> the proposal that was presented by your applicant concerning the property at the Buckhorn <br /> location. About two and a half or three years ago, the officials of the City of Mebane and <br /> Orange County met to talk about the need to supply water and sewer for the new Gravelly Hill <br /> Middle School that needed to be built in western Orange County. The City agreed to do that, <br /> and at that particular time, we also talked about what might take place over the next number of <br /> years with the properties on both sides of the interstate, particularly, that property that was <br /> occupied by the Jockey Lot. You asked us at that time if we could also make an allocation of <br /> water and sewer in each of those properties and we agreed to do that. I think we gave you a <br /> letter along that line. In the course of the conversation there, we said that this is not an open- <br /> ended deal, but a limited amount of uses that you can get from the City of Mebane, but it was <br /> far in excess of anything that's been described here tonight that would be needed on this <br /> development. We also said in our conversation, and I'd like to emphasize a few things, that the <br /> tenants going into that area would not be large users, and we're talking about industrial type <br /> users, of either water or sewage. That they would provide good employment opportunities, and <br /> we've heard something about the number of employees that might be involved here. That they <br /> would be a good addition to the tax bases of both Orange County and Mebane. In addition to <br /> that, that any development that takes place there should be to the benefit of the surrounding <br /> neighborhood. We have been approached by a number of people who live along Buckhorn <br /> about their septic tank problems and other things and asking that we provide some help, and <br /> that was part of the conversation we had with the Orange County officials. Mebane has <br /> provided water and sewage for Gravelly Hill and we are now ready to provide both of those <br />