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Agenda 03-19-24; 5-a - Zoning Atlas Amendment – 6915-UT Millhouse Road, Chapel Hill
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Agenda 03-19-24; 5-a - Zoning Atlas Amendment – 6915-UT Millhouse Road, Chapel Hill
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3/19/2024
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5-a
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123 <br /> Since the County cannot count on Crown Castle's agreement to move its access road, any <br /> requirement imposed upon the Treeist to construct a second access road runs the risk of ending <br /> up with two roads traversing the Old Field Creek, the riparian buffer, and the wildlife corridor. <br /> Moreover, since neither of these two roads may be well positioned to satisfy access needs of <br /> the future soccer complex, a third access road may yet be needed. This outcome, with the land <br /> divided by multiple redundant roads, might prompt an ironic parsing of the name "Millhouse <br /> Road Park." <br /> The Safety of Children <br /> Up until now, the brief traffic data note in our site plan has overrepresented by nearly a factor of <br /> two the amount of traffic that we will create at this location.'At our present size, we would <br /> generate approximately 64 trips per day total.'As we gradually grow this total will also grow. <br /> Still, even at our most ambitious size, I project generating not more than 164 trips per day from <br /> the new location.' <br /> Mr. Stancil foresees a possible future in which "parents and children crossing back and forth <br /> across [the access road] to access vehicles or other fields" and that our commercial use of the <br /> access road gives him "serious concerns about the safety of future users of the facility, <br /> especially small children." <br /> It is easy to feel that no cost is too high when attempting to reduce hazards to young children. <br /> This, however, is a faulty approach to risk. It would prevent the soccer complex from being built <br /> in the first place. <br /> For a small child, getting hit by a 3,500 pound Prius is not better than getting hit by a 20,000 <br /> pound chip truck. It is, moreover, far less likely for a chip truck to sneak up on you in the way <br /> that Prius will. The riskiest time and place for a child will be when none of our trucks are in sight. <br /> It will be during a busy Saturday in the crowded parking lot between the soccer games. The <br /> most dangerous driver for small children will not be the professional driver of our larger trucks <br /> who holds a commercial license subject to more stringent standards. The most dangerous driver <br /> 6 1 am at fault for not looking at the traffic data site plan note more carefully. When I was originally <br /> considering this question of traffic, I was most mindful of the 800 trips per day threshold that triggers a <br /> need for a Traffic Impact Analysis (UDO section 6.17). Knowing that whatever we did we would be far <br /> below this threshold, I did not take due care in counting how little traffic we actually would end up <br /> generating. <br /> 7 Presently we have about eighteen employees who, on a week-day, arrive and leave from our company <br /> headquarters on a regular basis (other employees, such as consultants and some office staff typically <br /> work from home). Of these, only fourteen of these employees create two, instead of one, to-and-fro trips <br /> to our company headquarters per day. If we count arrival and departures as separate trips, we get a <br /> grand total of 64 trips per day. <br /> 8 Long-term we may have as many as twelve 3-person crews. This is all that our site plan is designed to <br /> accommodate. This means that, at maximum, we may have 36 employees who make two to-and-fro trips <br /> to the company headquarters. Auxiliary support staff that also need to be at the company headquarters <br /> on a daily basis may add about nine more individuals, but these will typically make only one to-and-fro <br /> trip. While we will have additional employees, our consultants and some of our office staff will continue to <br /> typically work from their homes, as they do now. <br /> 5 <br />
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