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Published Wednesday, November 18, 2009 in Local
The Newnan Times-Herald
The Coweta County Board of Commissioners unanimously denied two rezoning requests near the intersection of Ga. Hwys. 54 and 16 Tuesday, and approved rezoning property near Lower Fayetteville Road and Ga. Hwy. 154 to a less intense category than what was requested.
The board also voted to deny two variance requests associated with the Lower Fayetteville/154 request.
The request for a medium-density residential subdivision along Neely Road was the first to be taken up by the commissioners.
First-district Commissioner Paul Poole made a motion to deny the request. It was seconded by Al Smith. The vote was unanimous.
Poole then made a motion to deny the request for commercial rezoning on adjacent property along Ga. Hwy. 16. That motion was also seconded by Smith, and the vote was unanimous.
Poole recused himself from the discussion of the Lower Fayetteville rezoning request because his family owns nearby property.
Fourth-district Commissioner Rodney Brooks said he felt the requested zoning was too intense for the area.
The request had been that 17.33 acres be zoned C7, Commercial Major Shopping District, for a retail shopping center that would include a grocery store and parking. Heavy Commercial zoning, C8, was proposed for 20.78 acres to include gas pumps associated with the grocery store, a carwash, an automotive service business, public storage, and continued operation of Country Gardens Nursery.
"I feel that C-8 and C-7 is too high of a commercial setting for this particular area," Brooks said. "I am asking the applicant if you would be willing to concede to a C-6 and adopt all of the recommendations placed on it by staff."
Dennis Drewyer, representing applicant Michael Cunningham, asked if the C-6 would allow the continued operation of the nursery.
"If it is already there and in operation, and it doesn't cease operation for more than 12 months," the business can continue to operate as a non-conforming use, said Assistant County Attorney Nathan Lee. No expansion would be allowed, however.
Drewyer said C-6 would be acceptable. That zoning allows most commercial uses, but no single entity can be more than 35,000 square feet.
The vote was 3-1, with Commissioner Tim Lassetter opposed.
Later in the meeting, the board considered two requests for buffer variances for the entrances to the commercial development.
On the Lower Fayetteville Road side, plans were to use the existing nursery entrance. Because the entrance is near the property line, there isn't room for the required buffer zone between commercial and residential property.
Because the residential property is heavily wooded, the Board of Zoning Appeals had recommended approval. The planning department recommended denial.
The owners of the adjacent property were notified of the request and didn't file any complaints or come to the zoning appeals meeting, said Zoning Administrator Angela White.
Brooks made a motion to approve the variance with conditions, but it died for lack of a second.
Commissioner Randolph Collins made a motion to deny the variance.
"I don't feel we need to use someone else's property to establish buffers," Collins said.
Smith seconded the motion, saying, "I just feel that we would be derelict in our duty to use an existing buffer that the applicant is not responsible for."
The motion passed with no opposition.
The other buffer variance was for an entrance on Ga. Hwy. 154. The entrance road "adjoins the back side of" the Candlewood subdivision, White said. One of the two adjacent property owners was opposed to the buffer variance, White said.
She said the planning staff was originally told the Georgia Department of Transportation would only allow access at that particular point.
White said she asked for confirmation from the DOT, and "the only e-mail I received said that this was a safe location."
"The question is, Are there other safe locations? And they said, 'We haven't evaluated other locations because this is where we were asked,'" White said. She said Wayne Kennedy, the county's director of development and engineering, "said he truly could not comment on this until a traffic study was done" in order to determine the exact length and width of turning lanes.
After Brooks made a motion to deny, Drewyer said he would like to comment on the request. "I would think you would be very concerned about the issues on 154," he said. Any entrance closer to the intersection would interfere with site distance and the new turn lanes for the intersection improvement, Drewyer said.
Candlewood residents also spoke, opposing the variance. "He did get his zoning. It may not be quite what he wanted, but now can the people of Candlewood get a little bit of justice?" asked Alan Pope. "Can we at least do away with this entrance? It's going to go right behind a lot of homes."
The vote to deny was 4-0.
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What is wrong with this man trying to make money on property he owns. If you owned come property worth developing you would be doing the same thing.
Posted by RG at 12:41 PM
Well, it doesn't matter for those who are for it because it always gets turned down by the good old commissioners!
Posted by Newnan resident at 11:17 AM
I was just stating an example. I just wish people would tell me what is needed then!
Posted by Newnan resident at 11:14 AM
Knew that it would be approved regardless of comment. Making more money or keeping your life happy- commissioners will ALWAYS vote for dollar signs.
Posted by say what? at 10:41 AM
We don't live in the city. We live in unincorporated Coweta County. That's why the Board of Commissioners considered this matter. What do businesses being open on the weekend or billboards have to do with unneeded overdevelopment? Some of the proposed developments might be quite grand for those not living next to them.
Posted by Chris Kimes at 12:25 AM
The owners of the adjacent property probably knew that their protest would do little good since it was developer against homeowners. Now they will probably deny the homeowners the right to cut down their own trees. Not that they want to see the traffic and hear the noise anyway.
Posted by disgusted at 9:12 PM
What do you suppose we need then BrownBetty?? $5,000 signs on the interstate telling people to come into the city? Well, I think the business might want to consider being open on the weekends then.
Posted by Newnan resident at 5:18 PM
We don't need anymore gas stations and grocery stores!
Posted by BrownBetty at 2:28 PM
The proposed development on Hwy 16 would have been wonderful for the residents of Sharpsburg.
Posted by Resident at 2:26 PM
I do not know Mr Drewyer. Apparently he is a very intelligent gentleman. It seems strange that he is allowed to request and speak for zoning for other folks. I a property owner wants to rezone his property he should have enough knowledge to speak for himself rather than hire someone to speak for him or her unless he has a handicap preventing this. Let him face his neighbors and answer there questions.
Posted by disgusted at 11:49 AM
You go Pope!
Posted by Joe at 10:07 AM
Country Gardens
11/20/2009
Link To This Comment
I was glad to see the debate about different zoning for the Country Gardens spot. They are a proven business unlike the new businesses that close in 3 mos. I'm glad the storage unit part got denied though. Glad to see Mr. Poole recused himself.
Posted by Lara McCarthy at 12:10 PM