Orange County NC Website
1 <br />2 <br />3 <br />4 <br />5 <br />6 <br />7 <br />8 <br />9 <br />10 <br />11 <br />12 <br />13 <br />14 <br />15 <br />16 <br />17 <br />18 <br />19 <br />20 <br />21 <br />22 <br />23 <br />24 <br />25 <br />26 <br />27 <br />28 <br />29 <br />30 <br />31 <br />32 <br />33 <br />34 <br />35 <br />36 <br />37 <br />38 <br />39 <br />40 <br />41 <br />42 <br />43 <br />44 <br />45 <br />46 <br />47 <br />48 <br />49 <br />Commissioner Dorosin referred to page 7 of attachment b. He said fiscal year one <br />shows that there would be no increment, and Orange County would have no payment. <br />Clarence Grier said yes. <br />Commissioner Dorosin asked if this would carry forward if any of the projected numbers <br />in year 2 or 3 were not reached. <br />Clarence Grier said yes. <br />Commissioner Dorosin referred to page 9 and asked if the increased funding for <br />education is based exclusively on the per -pupil cost for 300 students. <br />Clarence Grier said yes <br />Commissioner Dorosin asked about Clarence Grier's earlier point about 48 percent of <br />the budget going to schools. He asked if that increase is part of the $980,000. <br />Clarence Grier it is part of this analysis too. <br />Commissioner Dorosin asked what the $980,000 represents. <br />Clarence Grier said this number represents the 48.1 percent, plus the increase in school <br />enrollment. <br />Commissioner Dorosin said he would like to see that broken out. <br />Chair Jacobs asked why the bottom of the face page lists 450 new students <br />Clarence Grier said 300 was the initial allotment of students anticipated to be added to <br />the Chapel Hill Carrboro City School System (CHCCS), and then the number goes up <br />incrementally, ending with 450 students. <br />Chair Jacobs said he has great difficulty with projections, and all of this based on <br />projections. He said they are talking about 20 percent amenity space, and he asked if part of <br />this space can used for a new school site, such as an elementary school. He said a site is <br />needed and the project is much more feasible if the County already has one. <br />Dwight Bassett said most of the site has been purchased and is owned for re- <br />development. He said there is adjacent property on Legion Road that may be sold. He said the <br />majority of the parcels are small. He said the student generation rates from the study are much <br />lower than what the County is projecting. He said if this development is similar to 140 West and <br />East 54 developments, the rates will be much lower. He said the projection is 100 children for <br />the 1,500 units. <br />Chair Jacobs said the County is reviewing the student generation rates. He feels there <br />is a misunderstanding about the site size needed that could accommodate an urban school, <br />and a couple of acres are sufficient. <br />Chair Jacobs said he has concerns about committing to participation in an area that has <br />physical problems such as the upstream water management system. He asked if there had <br />been any conversation about dedicating incremental revenues to this issue in case the grants <br />are not approved. He would like to see the Board could see the Stormwater Management <br />Master Plan, and he feels that having revenue dedicated to this public safety issue is a pre- <br />requisite for County participation. <br />Dwight Bassett said stormwater staff could come speak to the Board. He knows that <br />the basin is a priority in the master plan. <br />Commissioner Pelissier echoed Commissioner Gordon's earlier comments regarding the <br />need for a full accounting of all increased costs. She questioned what the effect will be on debt <br />capacity if schools need to be moved up in the Capital Investment Plan (CIP). <br />Commissioner Pelissier asked if the County portion of the debt would be higher if the <br />road improvements cost more than projected <br />Ken Pennoyer said at this point public improvements are being limited to $10 million. <br />Commissioner Pelissier asked if Chapel Hill would absorb the difference if the amount is <br />higher. <br />