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A question ?
Is this 109 acres that will be considered for rezoning at a public hearing on 4/20 located across from Huntington Hills on Refugee? If the existing zoning is R-1 and R-2 & developer is asking for a change to Planned Residential District, what is the difference in actual number of homes that can be constructed with a zoning change?
By lin
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How many more?
Let me reiterate something I asked before. How many houses per year do you want to have to build to support this sewer plant expansion? This whole issue can be resolved with answering this one simple question. It might take 4,000 houses to pay for the sewer plant. If you project that out over 20 years, are 200 more houses per year acceptable to you? Is 200 per year what you consider to be slow growth? 200 per year equates to potentially 260 students per year. It equates to over 10 additional classrooms per year. It equates to over 400 more vehicles on the roads per year. It equates to more police, more fire department people, etc.
Do the math. You can equate 200 houses per year in many different forms to see if it is acceptable. To some, the traffic may not bother you. To some, the school levies may not bother you. To some anything might bother you. To some, none of this might bother you. Any way you see this, please go to the council meeting on the 20th and register with the Clerk to speak your piece during the public comment section.
Let council know what you are willing to tolerate. Let them know whether or not to vote for a debacle started in the previous administration. The new leaders of council have repeatedly told you they are there to represent you. If you don?’t go tell them what you want then don?’t complain about what you get.
By Wise old owl
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Half way there
Oz,
The current NPDES permit from the Ohio EPA allows Pickerington to discharge 1.8 MGD into Scyamore Creek. That is half the battle in expanding the existing plant. The city would need to get a new PTI and it would need to engineer a new expansion but they could expedite the process by staying within their NPDES permit levels.
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More than 2 lots per acre
Lin
I believe a R-1 zoning is one lot per acre. The R-2 puts it at 2 lots per acre and they want to put Planned unit development which means they want more damn condos. Their density will be higher than the two lots per acre. I hope the township zoning board tells them to go fly a kite. Leave the density alone. The R-2 is too close to the city's low density zoning and they are going to the township.
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