Fore Note: Farragut Folded. One of the 3 NO votes
caved to the pressure and voted Knox County's way. Now the final
destruction of West Knox County can begin.
Meeting with Jacobs, Meyer changes, saves Knox GP
Amendments
farragutpress.com-After
Farragut Board of Mayor and Aldermen voted 3-2 against Knox County’s
Growth Policy Plan Amendments resolution Thursday, March 28,
Alderman Scott Meyer announced, at a special called meeting
Wednesday, April 3, that he will change his vote and approve the
resolution at the Board’s Thursday, April 11, meeting.
“Obviously, I’m glad they’re reconsidering the vote,” Knox County
Mayor Glenn Jacobs said after the meeting. “I certainly hope we can
work this out. I think everybody wants that.”
“Various Farragut/Knox County residents urged me to vote against the
Growth Plan,” Meyer said. “I believe the great opposition is rooted
in frustration with Farragut traffic that comes with rapid property
development.
“I
understand this frustration because I, too, regularly sit in traffic
for unacceptable amounts of time,” he added. “I believe we all can
agree that high-impact traffic comes from high-density development
because we live it everyday. I also understand property owners have
the Constitutional right to develop their land according to existing
zoning and precedent, a characteristic that distinguishes the United
States from countries like China and Cuba.
“In particular, as farmers in rural areas pass their
land to their descendants, the descendants have a right to develop
the land, which is a fact we must accept. Our goals should not be to
deny property owners their Constitutional rights to develop their
property because they will. “
Instead, “Our goal should be to control the development in order to
mitigate the traffic impact as much as possible,” Meyer said. “The
proposed Growth Plan Amendments reduce traffic impact in rural areas
by the following changes: No. 1, reducing the number of units per
acre from three units to two units, and No. 2 by omitting light
industrial use.
“Further, because rural areas border Farragut, these changes allow
for a Farragut traffic impact that is lower than currently allowed
by the existing growth plan,” he added.
“I commend Vice Mayor (Louise) Povlin for advocating for these
changes, as these changes will help preserve rural character and
mitigate traffic impact as these properties develop. As I mentioned
in last week’s meeting, my concern with the Growth Plan Amendments
was that they do not address density in the growth areas that border
Farragut.”
For example, “In both the planned growth area and the urban growth
boundary, developers could develop a range of densities, including
apartments or commercial properties, which have the highest traffic
impact of already congested Farragut roads,” Meyer said.
However, “during a cordial and very productive meeting yesterday
(Tuesday, April 2), Knox County Mayor Jacobs and staff confirmed
their commitment to me to keep density in these growth areas as low
as possible, which, in turn, will lead to the least impact on
Farragut traffic as possible,” he said. “This commitment to lower
density and ongoing collaboration has alleviated my concerns for the
Growth Plan Amendments.
“As I previously mentioned since our last meeting, I met with Knox
County officials and staff, as well as thought whether, in my
opinion, the Growth Policy Plan Amendments are the best interests of
the Town. I’ve decided, after much consideration, to change my
vote.”
The Board voted 3-0-1 on Meyer’s motion, seconded by Mayor Ron
Williams, to rescind the previous vote and place the resolution for
the Growth Policy Plan Amendments on the April 11 meeting agenda so
it could be renewed or reconsidered.
“That way, everybody can come back next time,” Town attorney Tom
Hale said. He explained at the beginning of the meeting that state
law required the Board to state its reasons for their objections to
the proposed Growth Policy Plan Amendments.
On the other side
Alderman Drew Burnett passed on the motion, with Meyer, Williams and
Povlin voting yes. Alderman David White, who left earlier in the
meeting, was absent for that vote.
“There’s over a 1,000 acres that can be developed at two units an
acre,” Burnette said. “That, alone, is hard to imagine what that
does to an already fragile and broken road.
“On top of that it also allows for the possibility of Neighborhood
Commercial,” he added. “They would only need to meet one of the
three stipulations to be granted a Commercial zone in a rural area …
it just drives more traffic, it drives more homes, more development
in the area.”
Also, he referred to the county’s transportation plan “that only
listed minor improvements. With only minor improvements in that
area, it leaves residents in a tough spot for the next 10 to 20
years.”
Burnette said there is a large piece of property along Northshore
Drive that “has some parts in rural and some parts in planned
growth.” He believes the whole property “should be rural.”
“After the last vote, I’ve spoken with Mayor Jacobs, and the things
I hear said and the threats, that’s not the guy that I talked to,”
the alderman added. “That means something.
“I’ve lost sleep over this. I’ve had countless
nights trying to figure out where I stand, where my people
stand.”