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 />50 <br />51 <br />30 <br />❑ Look at developing supplier / logistics parks for OEM's and other manufacturing companies. <br />Orange County has a tremendous opportunity given the logistics network in place with 1 -40 & I- <br />85 and proximity to RTP & Research Universities <br />❑ More swiftly implement Article 46 Funds for infrastructure related projects. <br />Study Conclusions <br />❑ Lacking beady to Go" Product <br />❑ Not as much developable property as we thought once you place constrains on the <br />properties & remove inhabited properties <br />❑ Ever increasing competitive market with shorter and shorter timelines for decisions to be <br />made (i.e. Need diverse "Ready to Go" Product) <br />El Properties are overpriced compared to adjacent localities(Alamance) <br />❑ Lacking water & sewer capacity in districts <br />❑ Missing out on opportunities for Prospects due to lack of product &inadequate water & sewer <br />capacities <br />In reply to a question from Commissioner Dorosin, Mr. Hall explained that vacant properties <br />were included in the site selection methodology regardless of whether the properties were for <br />sale; properties greater than five acres with housing structures on them were not included. <br />In reply to a question about living wages from Commissioner Marcoplos, Mr. Hines said that the <br />County's first step is to have a product, a suitable parcel with water and sewer available. That <br />way the County would be in the position to say No to undesirable prospects as opposed to the <br />prospects rejecting the County. Once the County has suitors, it can be more selective, for <br />example by using living wages as a criterion, he said. <br />Commissioner Jacobs said he has a mixed reaction to the report. For the most part what you <br />are describing is positive and hopeful, he said. I think we can address most of the concerns that <br />Timmons Group has raised. But it reads as though it does not understand Orange County's land <br />use plan, its environmental ethics, some of the reasons why we have done what we have done. <br />For example, siting a school in an EDD was the only way we were able to extend water and <br />sewer to the EDD at that time. Instead of looking at that as a negative, you should understand <br />that the school was how we got water and sewer to the area. Second, the two Interstate <br />interchanges you recommend for development are in the Rural Buffer, which for 25 years and <br />as an essential component of our land use plan is not to have water and sewer extension. Third, <br />you should not be referring to a countywide water and sewer plan; I think you mean a water and <br />sewer plan that is inclusive of the development corridor. We have watersheds into which we <br />decided 35 years not to extend water and sewer. Some of this just feels like boiler plate. <br />The other ideas — trying to get property ready for sale and trying to have property pre -zoned — <br />may be worth exploring, he said, although we just approved a development on a property that <br />was pre -zoned and the neighbors did not understand; we would need to accompany this <br />approach with a public education process. <br />Steve Brantley, Director of Economic Development for the County, said the county has some <br />theoretically developable properties, but they are disbursed across buffers, utility lines, streams, <br />homes, and properties that are not for sale. We don't see a lot of projects looking for one acre <br />sites, he said, and there are not a lot of one -acre sites contiguous to each other that can be <br />combined to support a larger footprint. The average site per acre of developable properties is <br />quite low, he said. <br />