Orange County NC Website
May 6, 2008 Draft Comprehensive Plan w <br />Planning Board's Table of Proposed Revisions Minus Line Items Revised by BOCC a' <br />(Line items revised by the BOCC have been noted where applicable) <br /> ,~ a ~ ~, <br /> PB Proposed Revision °a w ~ ~ • <br /> (Chapter breaks and new objectives are shaded) ~ a N n. a~ <br /> <br />~_ ~ ~ <br />o~ <br />d a J Oma om <br /> <br /> The majority of these quality soils extend across the County in a diagonal <br /> pattern southwest to northeast as shown in the dark preen areas on the ELAB <br />2) 6-4 General Soils Map (6-2). ~ Staff 9/10/2008 <br /> <br /> ELAB <br />3) 6-5 4-102 Replace Map 6-2: Orange County Geology with Orange County Soil Survey. Staff 9/10/2008 <br /> ~~•••Americans that settled along the area's rivers and streams. Although no Staff 7/9/2008 <br />4) 6-6 11 written record of..." <br /> LAB <br /> Move parenthesis to read, "Anglican (from Eastern North Carolina and E g/10/2008 <br />5) 6-6 30 Vir inia and En lish Quakers. Staff <br /> Add, "Orange County escaped the physical destruction of the Civil War but, ELAB <br />6) 6-7 2 like so much of the south, experience substantial financial loss as well as Staff 9/10/2008 <br /> social upheaval." <br /> ELAB <br />7) 6-7 4 ~C^~,T~~a~r~rer~ Agricultural Production suffered from the absence ... Staff 9/10/2008 <br /> Many emancipated blacks left rural Orange for opportunities elsewhere but ELAB 4/1/2008 <br />8) 6-7 7 others stayed, acquired property and prospered. Staff <br /> <br /> Insert revised Cultural Resources Map and label it. See Attachment 6.2. ELAB 4/1/2008 <br />9) 6-7 27 (Map also included in Profile Element as Map D-15.) Staff <br />11/06/08 All comments from the May and August Public Hearings were considered by the Planning Board during its review process. 16 of 32 <br />