Orange County NC Website
17 <br /> 1 and he has told everyone no. He said they even called him five times and the fifth call ended with <br /> 2 the representative from the schools telling him that they can condemn and take his property if <br /> 3 they needed to. He said his land is being taken from out from under him. He asked them to please <br /> 4 think about this. <br /> 5 Ian Scott said he is with the Chamber for a Greater Chapel Hill-Carrboro. He said this area <br /> 6 of land is close to other developments, near UNC Hospital, and it is a regional infill opportunity. <br /> 7 He said there is more planned in the south. He said this is an essential first step for planning. He <br /> 8 said it is on an existing bus route. He said this is the first step in a meaningful plan that the Town <br /> 9 of Chapel Hill will conduct. He said that staff is strained and asking them to spend time planning, <br /> 10 when the biggest determining factor is the water and sewer and it is unknown, does not make <br /> 11 sense. He said it does not change any of the existing development or building requirements. <br /> 12 Claudia Fernandez said people did not know this was happening. She said it is important <br /> 13 to listen to the people that live there. She said that the residents in the ETJ are not represented <br /> 14 by anyone but the Board of Commissioners. She said they have been asking for more community <br /> 15 meetings. She said they hear there is a rigorous development process and Chapel Hill controls <br /> 16 6% of the development. She said she has heard of the McMansions that exist when they do not. <br /> 17 She said these homes were built in 1970s and on land that does not perk well. She said <br /> 18 aggressive speculators are calling landowners already and they will not be able to afford to live <br /> 19 anywhere else in Chapel Hill. She said they will lose land that helps with watershed concerns. <br /> 20 She asked them to slow down so that everyone can understand what they are doing. She said <br /> 21 that there is access to water and sewer for those that need it but bringing it to the area will open <br /> 22 it for development that has not had enough analysis done. <br /> 23 BJ Warshaw said for 40 years, the development in this area has been guided by the <br /> 24 community. He said the 1992 Southern Small Area Plan marked this area as a way to conserve <br /> 25 the environment and limit sprawl. He said at no point in time has there been a plan in the past 40 <br /> 26 areas discussing denser development in the southern ETJ. He said development along 15-501 <br /> 27 may be inevitable, but it will be a process spanning several decades and we can afford to pause <br /> 28 here. He said the plans from OWASA, Orange County, and Chapel Hill have regularly marked the <br /> 29 area as a small area plan that remains open space. He said that at no point in time has there <br /> 30 been a plan that stipulates or discusses developing the area. He said that it is moving too quickly. <br /> 31 Julie Coleman said she was called by the Carrboro lawyer and told that they would take <br /> 32 her land under eminent domain for Carrboro High School. She said it was this group that saved <br /> 33 her land. She said that rather than taking her home and her neighbor's home, they used land <br /> 34 owned by an out of state developer. She said that one of her neighbors has 70 acres of land and <br /> 35 there used to be a crystal-clear pond and it is no longer. She said that Smith Level Road is <br /> 36 beautiful. She said she is not a person of great wealth, as the Chapel Hill Town Council referred <br /> 37 to her, but she is thankful to have her land. She said that she hears affordable housing and wants <br /> 38 that, but there must be money in the bank and Chapel Hill Town Council does not have the money <br /> 39 in the bank. She said if the federal government is ready to give, then she might start listening. <br /> 40 She said as long as the area stayed as farmland, Southern Village could be built. She said her <br /> 41 space was used. She said the people that live there do not want this. <br /> 42 Holly Fracarro, the CEO of the Homebuilders Association for Durham, Chatham, and <br /> 43 Orange Counties, said that a "yes" vote is not a "yes" for any development. She said that Chapel <br /> 44 Hill has a very rigorous process for developers to go through when rezoning. She said that a <br /> 45 developer would likely cover the cost of affordable housing. She said a "yes" is simply a "yes" to <br /> 46 an agreement that allows them to have thoughtful conversations with developers and allows the <br /> 47 Town of Chapel Hill to negotiate with the developer. <br /> 48 Dan Jewell said he has been designing communities in this part of the county for 40 years. <br /> 49 He reiterated that this vote won't approve new development but will open the door for <br /> 50 conversations to start. He said that the concerns are that the development will add to stormwater <br /> 51 issues but again, the Town of Chapel Hill has the strongest regulations in the state. He said that <br />