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Commissioners hear update on stormwater board
Tuesday, 10 April 2007 18:28
By JIM GENARO

In the six months since the Buncombe County Commissioners passed a new stormwater-runoff ordinance, the agency charged with enforcing the ordinance has received 19 permit applications covering 116 acres of land, according to Stormwater Administrator Mike Goodson.

Goodson, who has served as the agencyís administrator since February, presented an update on the implementation of the new rules to the commissioners on April 3.

The regulations were passed in an effort to mitigate the damage caused by excess stormwater runoff that results from new development in the county.

Since passage of the rules in September, eight applications have been approved and six have been rejected, Goodson said. An additional five applications are currently pending.

Furthermore, he said he has worked on setting up the administration of the new agencyís offices, created the permit applications and developed a complaint system so that residents who think a developer has violated the rules can request an investigation. Four such investigations have been launched so far, he noted.
Chairman Nathan Ramsey expressed surprise that so few acres of land have been involved in the permit applications so far.

ìI would have thought thereíd be more acres to come under this,î he said.

Goodson replied that developers are investing more time into their stormwater-runoff plans now before submitting applications.

ìThe designers donít want to spin their wheels, so they donít want to send in a plan that might not even be approved,î he said.

The goal of his organization is to ìprovide a level of protection for the citizens of Buncombe County,î Goodson told the board. This includes improving the ìquality of runoff through low-impact development measures.î
ìWhat have you seen are some of the big challenges?î Ramsey asked him.

Water detention is a major challenge from an engineering perspective, Goodson answered.

To prevent soil erosion, water sometimes has to be detained as long as 48 to 100 hours, he said. This can require drainage pipes as small as one inch in diameter or less, he noted.

Addressing the low-impact development techniques Goodson had mentioned eariler, Commissioner David Gantt asked, ìWhen youíre talking to developers, do you see a lot of people who donít know about these techniques ... or is it more, ëI donít want to do it because itís more expensiveí?î

Goodson replied that it is ìmore of an education issue. Itís not a new technology, but itís new to usî in Western North Carolina.

He also said that this area has unique challenges due to its mountainous terrain. He noted that in drafting the ordinance, one of the challenges had been trying to find a county with stormwater-runoff rules that had similar terrain to Buncombe County.

ìI havenít quite found that yet,î he added.

Commissioner David Young asked, ìAs far as the ordinance goes, whatís your feeling about it?î

ìI think the Planning Board did a very good job putting the ordinance together,î Goodson replied. ìI think some of the more technical things need to be worked out.î

He added that, according to the Environmental Protection Agency, the costs of implementing stormwater-runoff controls can account for between 25 and 30 percent of the total costs of a new development.

In other actions, the board:

ï Unanimously approved a policy on Tax Increment Financing after hearing a presentation about it from Finance Director Donna Clark.

This method of project financing is ìa financial tool used by local governments to promote development within the county,î she told the board.

The state-mandated program allows municipalities to fund development through loans that are paid back using the increased tax revenues that result from that development, she explained.

The new policy states that Buncombe County will only use TIF for projects that ìpresent a public benefit ... in a blighted area,î Clark noted.

So far, the county has approved only one such project ó the construction of a downtown district in Woodfin.
Clarifying what is meant by ìblighted areas,î Clark explained that the county would only fund projects that could not happen without public financing.

Ramsey praised the Woodfin initiative, noting that it was the second TIF project in the state and ìthe first that was acclaimed universally, statewide.î

ï Unanimously approved a new task force to assess the needs of the countyís judicial system.

The move came after some commissioners complained last month when their meeting room began being used as a courtroom.

The space was required after James Calvin Hill was appointed as the countyís seventh District Court judge ó causing a shortage of courtroom space in the county building.

Half of the new task force will comprise judicial officials ó a district attorney, a court clerk and one judge from each court.

The remainder of the task-force members will be public citizens. The commissioners will seek applicants for the new board at their May meeting.

 County Manager Wanda Greene had initially requested that the task force comprise 15 members, but the board scaled that back to 10 after Young expressed concerns that too many members might diminish the new panelís effectiveness.

However, the board agreed to revisit this question if it appeared necessary to increase the numbers in order to accomodate officials from each district court.

ï Issued a proclamation declaring April, 2007, to be ìChild Abuse Prevention Month.î

ï Made a number of appointments, including Jennifer Waite, Julie Strum and Judy McDonough to the Nursing Home Community Advisory Committee; and Sarah Foster, Ceasar Romero, Karen Gettinger, Joel Bender, Tim Laughlin, Barbara Mayer and Brenda Crisp to the Adult Care Home Community Advisory Committee.

Commissioners also appointed Lynn  Hicks as the U.S. Forest Service representative to the countyís Environmental Advisory Board.
 



 


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