Charlotte Sun (Port Charlotte, FL)
June 7, 2008
City's dirt mine plan needs impact study, attorney says
City official reluctantly continues hearing
The
city of Punta Gorda's plan to excavate a dirt mine on a 166-acre future
reservoir site was sent back to the drawing board Friday.
City Engineer Mark Gering reluctantly decided to put a halt to a public
hearing on the proposal after an attorney for a group of homeowners
pointed out that Charlotte County's mining ordinance administrator had
waived requirements for an environmental impact study without the
authority to grant such a waiver.
The waiver raised a "significant legal issue," said Brad Kelsky,
attorney for the Washington Loop Homeowners Against Mining and the
Washington Loop Homeowners Preservation Association.
He pointed out there's nothing in the county's excavation ordinance that
allows county staffers to grant waivers to either environmental impact
studies or traffic impact analyses.
"If we're going to grant exceptions to one, we're going to start making
exceptions for everybody, and that would lead to the very thing that
land-use ordinances are supposed to protect us against, haphazard
land-use decisions," Kelsky said, in comments after the hearing.
Gering ultimately agreed to a continuance of the hearing until after the
city conducts the environmental study.
He added that it was "unfortunate" because the "ratepayers will bear
that extra cost."
"I think there's lots of gray areas in every ordinance, and yes, I
agreed with the county land-development supervisor that (the waiver) was
fair," Gering said.
The city's proposal was one of several dirt mine applications that were
considered by County Hearing Examiner Kevin Russell Friday.
The others included a 10-year extension excavation permit set to expire
in August for a 395-acre mine on Robin Road in the Rotonda area. Brian
Stock of Stock Development, which acquired the mine in 2005, also sought
an exception to the ordinance to allow the pit to have extra steep
walls.
Stock is also considering developing the pit as a marina in the future.
Also heard Friday was a proposal by Williams Road Properties to excavate
a 157-acre mine in southeastern Charlotte County.
After hearing testimony from expert witnesses about the specifications
of the mines, Russell took them under advisement. He decides the permits
within the next three weeks, he said.
Punta Gorda, which currently supplies water from a dam across Shell
Creek, plans to develop its site with a reservoir in some 10 years. The
city also plans to impound water in Tippan Bay and Long Island Marsh in
the headwaters of Shell Creek.
The city is currently working with the Peace River/Manasota Regional
Water Supply Authority to build a pipeline to the authority's water
plant in DeSoto County. That pipeline would export water from Shell
Creek to meet future demands throughout the authority's four-county
region.
But Punta Gorda shouldn't have to fulfill the county's requirement for a
cumulative impact study because the city's dirt mine would be small
compared to other commercial dirt mines, said Barbara Jeffries, county
land-development supervisor.
She pointed out Punta Gorda plans to remove only 271,699 cubic yards of
soil from a 10-foot-deep pit.
By comparison, the Williams Road proposal calls for 7-million-cubic
yards to be excavated from a 40-foot-deep pit.
"(The city's excavation) is, pardon the pun, a drop in the bucket
compared to the amount of material moving out of the county," Jeffries
said.
Kelsky pointed out the city could have applied for a permit to excavate
a utility reservoir -- and that "utility permit" requires no impact
studies. But that permit would also not allow the city to export dirt
off-site.
Gering said the city plans to sell dirt and use it on city sites.
Kelsky also argued the city's traffic analysis was inadequate. The study
showed that the city's mine would generate 12 truck trips per day, less
than 2 percent of the 800 truck trips generated by three other active
mines in the area.
However, Kelsky said the city's traffic impact study should go further
to evaluate the cumulative impact of all the mines combined in the area.
Assistant County Attorney Derek Rooney said the city had the right to
demand its proposal be heard even if a legal question had arisen.
Russell, however, warned the city officials they would face a risk that
he could reject the proposal.
So Gering opted for the continuance to an unspecified date.
You can e-mail Greg Martin at
gmartin@sun-herald.com.
By GREG MARTIN
Staff Writer
Copyright (c) 2008, Charlotte Sun
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