Monday, March 27, 2023

Grab Bag

 


Miscellaneous items of interest.

Schools

Goochland Superintendent of Schools Jeremy Raley Ed.D. was tapped by Governor Youngkin to become the Chief of Staff to the Superintendent of Public Instruction at the Virginia Department of Education on March 22.

During his nearly seven-year tenure in Goochland, Raley has worked tirelessly to continually increase the achievement of our school division. He never missed an opportunity to celebrate the role that “Team Goochland”—every person who interacts with our students--played in the achievements of our school division.

Raley will be missed. We wish him every possible success and satisfaction in his new role.

Now it is up to the school board to find a worthy successor to Raley to continue our schools’ pursuit of excellence while maximizing the potential of every learner.

 

Roads

The heartburn being experienced by those who travel River Road West (Rt.6) caused by construction between Dover and Cardwell Roads is not over. See information below from the Goochland County website and choose an alternate route if you are able.

Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) has provided the County with an update on the paving work along River Road West (Rt. 6) in the Crozier Area. It will impact travel between 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM now through Wednesday, April 5th.

The paving project was originally scheduled to be completed by Friday, March 17th, 2023, and was initially extended through Friday, March 24th.  VDOT has informed the County that it has been extended to Wednesday, April 5th, work will resume on Monday, April 3rd through Wednesday, April 5th.  Work should occur Monday through Friday, the contractor is not working weekends according to their schedule.

During this time there will be alternating lane closures along River Road West (Rt. 6) between Cardwell Rd. (Rt. 670) and Dover Rd. (Rt. 642) for paving operations.  Drivers can expect significant travel delays.  Please use caution when traveling in the area and stay alert for changing traffic patterns.

For the latest real-time traffic information or road conditions, call 511 or visit http://www.511virginia.org

 

Last Town Hall meeting

The final session of the spring town hall meetings, focusing on Districts 2 and 3, will take place this Thursday, March 30, at the Central High School Cultural and Educational Center, 2748 Dogtown Road, beginning at 6:30 p.m. For instructions on virtual participation via Zoom! go to the calendar page of the county website https://www.goochlandva.us/

Thursday, March 23, 2023

In the pipeline

 

The first step in any land use change in Goochland is a community meeting. These sessions are run by the entity seeking the change, referred to as the applicant, to explain the proposed project and gather input from the community. Applicants often tweak proposals using feedback from these sessions to improve their chances of approval by the Planning Commission and Board of Supervisors, which has the final say.

Three community meetings were held in recent weeks, all for proposed projects east of Manakin Road in or near the Centerville Village. Robust attendance at all of these indicates that a proposed change to county policy to eliminate community meetings should be scrapped.

Honda Store

A meeting held on February 27 involved a proposal for a Honda dealership on land on the south side of Broad Street Road bordering the Henrico County line. Joey Huang of Ohio, who owns and operates Honda stores in the Midwest, explained that he was awarded this dealership by Honda as the result of a nationwide competition. The proposed dealership, said Huang, will be the first of a new prototype on the east coast and contended that it will comply fully with the Centerville overlay district rules, including dark sky provisions, and be a tasteful addition to Goochland’s  gateway corridor.

Proposed Honda store

On property zoned in 2015 for a memory care facility that was never built, the site plan includes an approximately 30K square foot dealership sales and service structure and a multistory parking structure at the rear of the property to store vehicle inventory. As the land falls off to the back, the visual impact of this structure on Broad Street Road will be minimal.

The dealership is expected to bring 50 to 60 jobs to the county and a capital investment of more than $20 million. The property is in the Tuckahoe Creek Service District and will pay ad valorem tax.

One attendee observed that the size of the subject parcel would be a “tight fit” for the dealership. Part of the parcel includes a county pump station and some wetlands.

As the paved median on Broad Street Road prohibits left turns, the dealership would be accessed by right turns only. This raised concerns about how large car carrier vehicles exiting the property could go left to return to Rt. 288 and access large fire-rescue apparatus.

Huang said that Honda expects to offer more electric vehicles in coming years. Concerns about fire suppression for electric vehicles stored in the parking structure were also raised. Fires in electric vehicles can be very hard to extinguish.  Huang indicated that the parking structure would be equipped with systems to address this issue.

Barring obstacles, this application could be on the May Planning Commission agenda, move on to the Board of Supervisors for approval by June. If all goes well, Huang anticipated completion near the end of 2024.

 

Medical Office Building

On March 14, a meeting for a proposed medical office building on 3.26 acres, currently zoned R-3 on the south side of Broad Street Road, just west of the southbound ramp to Rt. 288 was held. Again, attendance was robust. The applicant requests rezoning to B-1 with proffered conditions.

Applicant Dr. Harpreet Grewal proposes to build an approximately 33K square foot two story medical office building on the site. Access to the parcel would be through the existing road to the Gardener Nursey, which is located south of the subject property.

One floor of the building will be occupied by Grewal’s cardiology practice, the second would be leased to other doctors.

Nearby homeowners expressed traffic concerns. Residents of Bellview Gardens, on the opposite side of Broad Street Road, contended that turning on to Rt 250 is already treacherous as drivers exceed the 45mph speed limit. The recent addition of medical offices at the entrance to their subdivision worsened existing safety issues. They advocated for signalization of the intersection or accessing the property from an adjoining parcel.

Operators of the nursery contended that the proposed project would interfere with deliveries being made to their business by tractor trailers on the existing somewhat narrow access road.

This property is in the Tuckahoe Creek Service District and will pay ad valorem tax.

Another warehouse project on Ashland Road

On March 21, citizens filled the meeting room at St. Matthew’s Church to learn about a proposal for a warehouse/office project at 2212 Ashland Road. The site is a bit north of the “Project Rocky”. A pre-application filed by Crescent Communities to rezone 43.8 acres from A-2 to M-2 with proffered conditions to build two warehouse/office structures on about 30 acres of the subject parcel was the subject of this meeting.

The structures, one 181K square feet, the other 154K square feet, would be divided for use by multiple businesses into 25k to 50k square foot units. Having different users, explained the applicant, divides the investment risk. If rezoned, the property will be in the TCSD and pay ad valorem tax.

If approved by the Planning Commission and supervisors, the project would not be in operation before 2026.

An adjoining property owner said he was never contacted by the applicant about the project. He is worried about the negative impact from construction on his property, especially his well, which is near the property line.

The property is “under contract” and not yet sold. A representative of Crescent Communities said that the site was selected over West Creek because it was available from a “willing seller” at a certain price.

Preston Lloyd, the attorney representing Crescent Communities, explained that proximality of the Ashland Road corridor to I64 is attractive to warehouse operations. He contended that truck traffic generated by the proposed project would travel only between the site and I64 to the south.

As with any rezoning in Goochland, especially in the Ashland Road corridor, traffic impact raised the most ire. Before the meeting began, attendees swapped horror stories of how long it took them to navigate already snarled traffic on Ashland Road, north of Interstate 64.

A traffic engineer from the firm of Kimley Horn said that the proposed project would generate one tenth that of nearby Project Rocky and that its impact on Ashland Road traffic would be “minimal enough not to be noticed by drivers.” That comment produced a derisive reaction from citizens. The engineer said that  because additional traffic of about 60 vehicles per hour, is considered “almost  immeasurable”  it would not “move the needle enough” to require the applicant to chip in for the cost of the four lane diverging diamond over I64. The applicant offered to make whatever road improvements deemed necessary by the county and VDOT along its frontage on Ashland Road.

The assumptions used in the traffic analysis were conservative at the county’s request, said the Kimley Horn representative.

Level of service—how well a road operates—for a good portion of Ashland Road, which is poor and trending downward, was discussed.  Trucks, citizens contended, already run red lights in part because the large, heavy dump trucks that already travel these roads cannot stop on a dime.

The four lane diverging diamond at Ashland Road/I64, whose funding looks increasingly likely, will mitigate traffic issues in the area. Both the applicant and attendees seemed to agree on that. One gentleman pointed out that, even if the money is available tomorrow, it will take ten years to complete the work. In the meantime, traffic will get worse, made more dreadful by construction.

“Look at the people in this room,” he said of the group, which skewed older. “They’ll have to deal with miserable conditions maybe for the rest of their lives.”

The need for the project was attributed to greed by elected officials. One gentleman, who recently moved to Goochland, said he had attended the recent District 4 and 5 town hall. He learned there that the county budget was balanced and we had an excellent bond rating, so there is no need for economic development.

Other attendees said that the project is “nice” but not on Ashland Road. They contended that the human element of people who live and work in the area had not been taken into account.

Citizens wanted more details about buffers, tree save areas, and protection for Tuckahoe Creek and wildlife.

Another said that growth for the sake of growth is what a cancer cell does. Others contended that economic development will not add anything to the quality of life for Goochland residents.

Stay tuned to see how, or if, these projects move forward.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tuesday, March 21, 2023

Fire-Rescue survey

 from the Goochland County website:

Fire-Rescue wants to hear from you, Goochland.

Fire-Rescue is developing a Master Plan to plan for the future and has launched a community survey to gather feedback from area citizens, businesses, and other stakeholders. Individuals can provide honest opinions through the brief anonymous online survey.

Please take a few minutes to complete the survey at the QR Code or survey link below by April 30, 2023.

Survey --> https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/GoochlandCountyFireRescue

Goochland County Fire-Rescue Master Plan Survey

Fire-Rescue Master Plan Community Survey

Saturday, March 18, 2023

It's complicated

 








Government, especially at the local level, deals with the nuts and bolts of daily life, especially traffic.  

Goochland supervisors are painfully aware of the matter and held a transportation/capital improvement plan workshop on March 14 that covered road related topics.

Courthouse Village Roundabout

According to Transportation Manager Austin Goyne, the roundabout under construction at the intersection of Fairground and Sandy Hook Roads is on schedule.  A detour for phase III of the project will tentatively be put in place between April 24 and July 19. Sandy Hook Road will remain open with flagging operations during this time. Fairground Road will be closed at the entrance to Courthouse Commons Shopping Center. The passenger car detour route will use Dickinson Road, trucks, Maidens Road. Completion is expected sometime in October 2023.

Goyne said that a safety study of the Hermitage/Manakin Road interchange closest to Rt. 6, is expected to get underway soon. This was brought to the supervisors’ attention at their March 7 meeting.

 

The VDOT dance

In Goochland, transportation means roads. For the record, Goochland does not have a highway department that can be called out to add a lane, install a traffic signal, plow snow, or fill potholes.

The county relies on VDOT for all road construction, improvements, and most funding. Each year, the supervisors prioritize road projects for inclusion in a secondary six-year plan, for the funds that VDOT allots to Goochland. Often by the time a project gets to the head of the line, its actual cost exceeds the first estimate.

As Board Chair Neil Spoonhower, District 2, put it, road funding in Goochland is a combination of art and science. This workshop delved into the convoluted process the county must navigate to obtain transportation dollars, even for badly needed road improvements.

Since Goyne joined staff last year, said Spoonhower, more frequent meetings to discuss road projects in detail and explore potential funding mechanisms are possible. Going forward, supervisors who sit on regional transportation boards will work closely with staff on an informal basis to share pertinent information when it is available rather than wait for quarterly meetings.

Goyne explained that county road funding priorities must be flexible to deal with the changing priorities of the county. For instance, the four-lane diverging diamond (DDI) on Ashland Road moved to the top of the list following the approval of “Project Rocky” last summer. Additional expected growth in the Ashland Road industrial corridor supports that change.

VDOT uses a competitive process to award transportation funding through various programs. Goochland competes with other jurisdictions in the Richmond region for these dollars. (Think mother robin with a worm in her mouth and lots of hungry baby birds vying for a bite.)

(To listen to the entire discussion to see just how complicated the subject is, go to the county website https://www.goochlandva.us/ click on watch county meetings and under the BoS tab select March 14 transportation and CIP workshop.)

Goyne reported that the county’s initial application for “Smart Scale” funding for the DDI was not successful. (To learn more about this program go to https://www.smartscale.org/) As this project has a high regional priority. Staff and supervisors who sit on various regional transportation boards, will pursue other avenues to secure funding.

The Hockett Road extension Smart Scale application was recommend to receive $1.1 million, which will fully fund the project.

A roundabout for the westbound I64 exit ramp/ Oilville Road interchange, whose cost was estimated at $7.5 million, was not ranked a high statewide priority and got no funding from the latest round of Smart Scale applications. Other funds may be used, including federal dollars and local revenue sharing. About $606K in local revenue sharing and a $4 million obligation from the federal government omnibus bill are available for the project. The trick is how to find the $2.91 million shortfall.

Goyne explained that there are various sources of road funding, including the Central Virginia Transportation Authority, the Richmond Regional Transportation Authority, the Federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. Each of these has different criteria for awarding money. These programs tend to review road projects to award funding on yearly cycles, further delaying completion. Strategizing to ensure the highest and best use of local proffer and other funding sources is crucial.

A review of the county’s arterial management plan, done in 2015, and major throughfare plan, from 2018 was done to see how priorities in those plans align with actual growth pressures.

Fairground Road safety study

Goyne elaborated on the Fairground Road safety study that the supervisors received at their March 7 meeting. (The results begin on page 91 of the March 7 board packet)

The study recommends improvements including trimming trees,  addition of turn lanes, paving gravel shoulders, adding rumble strips, and painting stop bars. The most significant recommendation is a roundabout at the Fairground/Maidens Road intersection.

Goyne said that the study allows staff to work with VDOT to implement some of the proposed improvements. The less expensive ones, including tree trimming, signage, striping, can be part of the maintenance budget.

“Mid Term” improvement including rumble strips and shoulder widening will be prioritized but are not funded.

The roundabout will be added to the transportation priority list, but no funding is currently available.

Goyne addressed concerns about the study conclusions raised by citizens, including a growth rate of 1.5 percent taken from a Travel Demand Model, which is a regional planning tool. This is reflects the increase of traffic on the road, not population growth. He said that the growth rate across the board for Central Virginia is .6 percent, but it was “bumped” for the study to conservatively account for the incomplete village small area plan studies.

Department of Motor Vehicles Crash data was used in the study, which differed from that reported by the Goochland Sheriff’s Office. Goyne said that using DMV data compares “apples to apples” for consistency across the region and state.  He said that GCSO crash data, for instance reported 66 crashes in the Fairground Road corridor in 2022, while DMV data recorded 28 crashes for the same period.

Smart Scale and other funding mechanism applications requite the use of DMV crash data to be considered, said Goyne. Use of the local data, he contended, helps to prioritize projects for improvement.

A citizen contended that more accurate and location specific traffic data is needed. Collection this data is a relatively inexpensive proposition, and would provide useful information to gage necessary road improvements related to proposed development in the corridor.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tuesday, March 14, 2023

March board highlights

 



In case you are unaware, a major repaving project is underway on Rt. 6 between Dover Road and Crozier, until March 25th. Please avoid this area if at all possible. Expect significant delays.

At its March 7 meeting, the Goochland Board of Supervisors heard results of “safety study” for Fairground Road performed by Kittleson and Associates, (https://www.kittelson.com/) to take a look at safety concerns on Fairground Road, and offer recommendations for their mitigation. The study, which “kicked off” in September 2022, was funded by the Virginia Department of Transportation

The scope of the study did not include the Fairground/Sandy Hook Road interchange, because of construction of a roundabout there, or the Hidden Rock/Fairground intersection. No reason was given for exclusion of the latter site.

After listening to the results of the study and the cost of some suggested improvements, the supervisors voted 4-1 with Vice Chair Charlie Vaughters in dissent, to “receive” the report. Vaughters said that he would have preferred to vote to approve the report.

County Transportation Manager Austin Goyne explained that the study documents potential safety improvements and includes 2023 cost estimates for the work. All roads in Goochland County are funded, built, and maintained by VDOT. Often, funding for a particular project is obtained via a competitive process and awarded based on various criteria, including how “shovel ready” it is. The study suggested a roundabout at the Maidens/Fairground Road interchange and paving and widening of shoulders in some areas. 

On Tuesday March 14 at 1 p.m. the board will hold a transportation workshop perhaps to discuss the study and see how it fits with the county capital improvement plan to fund road improvements.

Other highlights of the March 7 meeting:

 

Town hall meetings

Spring town hall meetings will be held for District 1 on March 23 at Byrd Elementary School 2704 Hadensville Fife Road and Districts 2&3  on March 30 at Central High School Cultural and Educational Center,2748 Dogtown Road. Sessions begin at 6:30. They are also available via Zoom go to https://www.goochlandva.us/CivicAlerts.aspx?AID=935 for links

The meeting for Districts 4&5 was held on March 8.

Chick fil A

Board members attended a ceremonial groundbreaking for the Chick fil-A under construction on Broad Street Road near the Wawa. Chair Neil Spoonhower, District 2, reported that Chick fil-A is aware that people in the western part of the county would like one also. (Anyone with a few extra coins in the couch cushions should go to https://www.chick-fil-a.com/franchise for more information on bringing one to the upper end.)

School budget

Goochland Superintendent of Schools, Jeremy Raley Ed.D presented the proposed school budget for FY24. Go to https://drive.google.com/file/d/1NTXoT13JFR9NjAhmfHYto6iQ5yisExHR/view for an executive summary.

Raley extolled the achievements of our school division, which has been ranked #1 in the Richmond region for five consecutive years. He credited the extraordinary people at all levels that make education in Goochland a good experience for making this possible. He also, like other department heads, outlined the challenges of attracting and retaining the best employees while competing with neighboring jurisdictions that have “deeper pockets” than Goochland.

Village Plans

Deputy  County Administrator Krystal Onaitis announced that Timmons Group has been retained by the county to complete the small area plans for Centerville and Courthouse Village. Timmons, said Onaitis, will  provide “a path forward” combining a fresh perspective and using all citizen input to craft  a flexible plan to guide land use decisions.

Public hearings

The supervisors agreed to defer a hearing on a rezoning application filed by Tuckahoe Lands, LLC to allow 17 lots on 14.298 acres at 12310 River Road in District 5 until April 18.

Conditional use permit applications filed by Capital Broad, LLC for 15.2 acres at 250 Broad Street Road  to operated a short term unhosted rental and place of public assembly (event venue) was unanimously denied by the supervisors.

The subject property, zoned A-2, is in area designated as “rural enhancement” by the county’s comprehensive land use plan. The applicant proposed an event venue using porta potties and tents in clear view of nearby homes. An existing home on the property would be used for short term rentals unhosted (think Airbnb).

The supervisors contended that the proposed change of land use was not consistent with the comp plan. Other event venues in the county have permanent structures, including bathrooms.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thursday, March 9, 2023

Freedom of Choice

 


Site of the Freedom of Choice marker (Goochland County photo)


There’s a lot of history in Goochland. Thomas Jefferson, whose personal book collection became the seeds for the Library of Congress, probably learned to read at Tuckahoe Plantation.

The Marquis de Lafayette is believed to have visited Goochland, and Cornwallis marched his army through Courthouse Village on the way to Yorktown.

Charles Lindbergh visited the Ben Dover estate in the eastern part of the county.

More recent, and unpleasant, history tends to get short shift. Awareness of what happened in the past, warts and all, is vital to put history in context to ensure that transgressions are not repeated.

The Goochland Historical Society has teamed with the Goochland NAACP and Rotary Club to place an historical marker in front of the county administration building to commemorate the integration of Goochland High School, which marked  the end of racially segregated education throughout the county in 1965. This was eleven years after the United State Supreme Court ruled segregated schools unconstitutional and months after the 1964 Civil Rights Act was passed by the United States Congress.

Robin Lind, President of the Goochland Historical Society, addressed the Board of Supervisors at its March 7 meeting to request approval of installation of the marker.

“Nine months after the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibited discrimination in public facilities, Goochland County schools were still segregated by race with approximately 1100 black students and 900 white students, “Lind said.

There were a white and black high school, two white elementary schools, Cardwell and Goochland, three black elementary schools Randolph, Kanawha, and Byrd. “A group of courageous students and their parents instituted a class action lawsuit seeking an injunction to provide for the prompt and efficient elimination of racial segregation in Goochland County public schools,” Lind said.

After the suit was filed, the Goochland School Board, on June 8, 1965, adopted a Freedom of Choice Plan to comply with the law. In the fall of 1965, 62 black students transferred to white schools. As a result, there were blacks in every grade in every school in the county, except for the sixth grade at Goochland Elementary School.

At the high school, said Lind, 14 black students—one each in grades 11 and 12; two each in grades nine and ten; and 10 in grade eight—were admitted.

The marker will recognize those who integrated Goochland High School and celebrate the courage, endurance, and grace of those students and their parents. “They believed that what Abrham Lincoln called “the better angels of our nature”, ab challenged the county to live up to those ideals, said Lind.

(Go to https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/FSupp/252/578/1410489/ to see the court case and details of how the ruling was implemented in Goochland.)

Linda Glover Minor of Gum Spring, one of those brave eighth graders, went on to teach in Goochland Schools.  She and some of her fellow student pathfinder were recognized with applause and a standing ovation from those attending the meeting.

“It is with grateful appreciation and a grateful heart that we say thank you to the Goochland Historical Society, Chrsitina Dunn, Robin Lind, Vernon Fleming, and Wayne Dementi for their work on the historical marker to represent those of us who were the first African American students at Goochland High School,” she said.

Minor looked around the room “This was our auditorium when we attended school, where we came for pep rallies to cheer our football teams on to victory.”

She thanked the supervisors for their approval to place the marker on the ground where this important event in county history took place. The  marker will be a primary source to study the past and serve as a beacon of light for the future, said Minor.

She also thanked her parents, the NAACP, and other community leaders who supported them and pushed for the law of the land to be followed. “There were obstacles and challenges, but the group had many successes. All 14 students graduated with their respective classes. Two of those are deceased, two live out of state, and the remaining ten, who were in the room, live in Central Virginia.

Eighth graders were: Jacqueline Carroll, Rose Ellis, Linda Glover, Diane Holland, Michaelle Johnson, Darnell McCowin, Eva J. Miles, and Sarena Robinson.

In the ninth grade were: John Jewell, and Patricia Diane Lewis. Frances Copeland was the sole eleventh grader, and Ronald Jewll, the only senior.

Priscilla Copeland and Aretha Robinson were tenth graders. Diane Patricia Lewis was a ninth grader. Serena Robinson Harris,

The Board of Supervisors unanimously approved placement of this Freedom of Choice marker in front of the county administration building, which was Goochland high school in 1965, to commemorate the integration of county schools.

Following approval by the supervisors, the marker will be ordered. Delivery is expected to be in about 24 weeks, which will determine the date for ribbon cutting. This is planned to be a community wide event, organized by the Goochland Historical Society, NAACP, and Rotary Club.

 

Sunday, March 5, 2023

GOMM Grab Bag



The Goochland Board of Supervisors will hold its regular monthly meeting on March 7 at the county administration building. The afternoon session begins at 2 p.m. The evening session and public hearings start at 6 p.m.( Go to https://goochlandcountyva.iqm2.com//Citizens/detail_meeting.aspx?ID=1433) to view the full agenda

Goochland Spring Town Hall meetings are as follows:

District 4 & 5

March 8, at the Residence Inn 1800 Wilkes Ridge Circle (roughly opposite Wawa on Broad Street Road)

District 1

March 23, at Byrd Elementary School, 2704 Hadensville Fife Road

Districts 2&3

March 30, at Central High School Cultural & Educational Center, 2748 Dogtown Road

All sessions begin at 6:30 p.m.

To watch and/or participate remotely go to https://www.goochlandva.us/CivicAlerts.aspx?AID=935 for information about specific meetings.

 

Small area plans

Deputy County Administrator Krystal Onaitis announced at the March 2 Planning Commission meeting that Timmons Group of Richmond has been retained by the county to provide a “fresh perspective” on the small area plans for Centerville and Courthouse Village.

“Timmons will review all previous community and stakeholder input to build upon the work done to date to ensure that community input and feedback is prominently highlighted,” said Onaitis.

In its review process, Timmons will propose a framework for the plans  to identify appropriate development zones while balancing the unique character of each village, Onaitis explained.

The end product will be a guide for land use decisions with flexibility for development in acceptable guidelines. This will eliminate, or reduce  the “one offs” in land use changes that do not adhere to the Comprehensive Land Use Plan.

Onaitis said that Timmons’ work will be presented to the Planning Commission and Board of Supervisors in late spring to be used to amend the county’s comprehensive Land Use Plan.

No mention was made of Hill Studios, the consultant previously retained by the county for approximately $180K, who produced a series of incomprehensible and generic suggestions for this  initiative.

It would be nice if Timmons at least reviewed the Master’s Thesis offering suggestions for growth in the Centerville Village around the turn of the century. An update of this work to reflect the current reality of land use pressures on the ground could provide a useful template for development.

This is good news for the planning process. Stay tuned.