Orange County NC Website
A <br /> PAGE 1 <br /> APPROVED 10-16-90 MINUTES <br /> SPECIAL MEETING <br /> WITH <br /> TOWNS OF CHAPEL HILL, CARRBORO AND HILLSBOROUGH <br /> JANUARY 18, 1990 <br /> The Orange County Board of Commissioners met in Special Session on <br /> January 18, 1990 at 7: 30 p.m. in the meeting room of the American Heart <br /> Association, Chapel Hill, North Carolina. The purpose of the meeting <br /> was to hear a report from Consultant Lane Kendig on the Rural Character <br /> Study. <br /> COUNTY COMMISSIONERS PRESENT: Chairman Moses Carey, Jr. and <br /> Commissioners Stephen Halkiotis, John Hartwell, Shirley E. Marshall and <br /> Don Willhoit. <br /> STAFF PRESENT: County Manager John M. Link, Jr. , Deputy Clerk to <br /> the Board Kathy Baker, Clerk to the Board Beverly Blythe, Planner David <br /> Stancil. <br /> Chairman Carey made opening remarks. He stated that the purpose of <br /> the meeting is to hear the preliminary recommendations of the Rural <br /> Character Committee and for the elected officials of the three <br /> municipalities to ask any questions they may have about this subject. <br /> He emphasized that public comments will not be heard at this meeting. A <br /> public hearing will be held at a later date for receipt of public <br /> comments. <br /> The presentation was made by Lane Kendig. He used slides to <br /> illustrate his narrative. Below is a summary of his presentation. <br /> Lane Kendig referenced the meetings which had been occurring with <br /> the Rural Character Study Committee, the individual townships, County <br /> Commissioners and Planning Board. He noted that the one issue which <br /> repeatedly arose was that of the constant conflict of the resource view <br /> of the land. The landowner basically looks at the land as a commodity <br /> and the planning view of the land is preservation and protection whether <br /> it be watershed protection, agricultural preservation, etc. He stated <br /> that the vast majority of very competent plans that fail, or seem to <br /> fail, that there are two separate views of the land. <br /> Mr. Kendig stated that his strategy was to try and give a system <br /> that will deal with rural areas of the County from four different <br /> viewpoints; agricultural preservation, preservation of natural <br /> resources, preservations of visual resources and the growth management <br /> element. He noted that the structure of the Land Use Plan with the <br /> Rural Buffer appeared to him to be predominantly a growth management <br /> strategy. He continued, that even though that element of the plan is <br /> well crafted, there is a giant loophole in it; you do not really create <br /> a rural area with two-acre zoning. A sizable amount of development will <br /> continue to occur in the rural areas, particularly the unzoned <br /> 4 townships. The containment of the sprawl will not really happen. <br /> The policy recommendations by Mr. Kendig, when they are translated <br /> into a Zoning Ordinance, will not look like the zoning ordinance which <br />