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Another piece of the Town Council meeting held July 21, 2009.

Staff Analysis is a written document prepared by members of a Planning Dept. to help Planning Commissioners and Town Council members understand all of the issues related to any change in zoning status of a parcel of land (zoning, rezoning, conditional use permit, etc.) These are documents routinely provided to the Planning Commission in every jurisdiction that I have been able to contact within the State of Virginia, except the Town of Christiansburg. (Let it be know that these documents were, in the past, prepared by the Planning Dept. of the Town of Christiansburg but staff was told to stop producing them.

Please note that this document is part of the official record and as such should be included in any minutes of the Town Council where decisions were made. Hmmmm….I’ve got about $1,200.00 worth of documents from the Town thus far. Guess what I don’t have? You got it. There is not one copy of a Staff Analysis in all of those Meeting Minutes, Ordinances, etc.

So, my questions now become: (1) “If those documents were prepared, who were they provided to? (2) If they were provided to anyone, did they ever get into the hands of the decision-makers (Town Council)? (3) If  they were provided to those decision-makers, why were they NOT included in the official documents? (4) Did Town Council make the decision to stop having those documents provided? (5) If the answer to (4) is no, then WHO did? (5) Why was the practice discontinued?

At the July 21 Town Council Meeting, the topic of staff analysis reports was brought up yet again. Henry Showalter, supported by Ann Carter, Michael Barber, and Jim Vanhoozier, noted that such a report would be very helpful in enabling them to make the best possible decisions for citizens.

While it may be brought up again, the door was all but slammed in their faces when the Mayor essentially turned the matter of deciding over to the Town Manager based upon whether the Town has enough staff to do the job!

Hello! If the Town does not have enough staff to do the jobs they should be doing, then just what the heck is going on???? AND, what is being done about it!!!! Trying to save people a few bucks of tax money when you are costing them a heck of a lot more in decreased property values, decreased quality of life, and increased insurance (just to name a few)…..we should thank you for this?????? Do you really think citizens are that stupid???? Well guess what, we’re not. We can see the $$$$ on the wall!!!!

We apparently do not have enough staff to do inspections concerning erosion and sediment control (even at our own Aquatic Center). We don’t have enough staff for the Planning Department to do what they use to do but stopped doing? We do not have enough staff to insure that elected and appointed officials are provided with all appropriate information necessary to make important decisions?

Mr. Mayor, perhaps in education you found it appropriate to just stop having math or science taught because you didn’t have enough staff? I’ll just bet the parents and School Board would love that approach! Or maybe you’d decide not to send an ambulance out to a vehicle accident because there might be too much work to do? Or, perhaps you would tell the Police Chief not to send an officer out to work an intersection where a traffic light was out because there just aren’t enough officers?????

I doubt it! I think you would take those things pretty seriously and deal with the issues as needed. Well, the issue of landuse is pretty darned serious. The issue of stormwater is pretty darned serious. There issue of codes enforcement is pretty darned serious.

Mr. Mayor, I think it is time to get serious about your responsibilities to the Town. It is not the Town Manager people are coming to with issues. It is not the Town Manager that people elected to represent them. It is not the Town Manager who decides the menu at those Town Council meetings. Let’s start dealing with issues rather than ducking them.

Is it time to change or is it time for change? Guess you are the decider on that part of the equation. Of course, you can sit back, do nothing, be non-commital, pass the buck, and wait for election time to come around. Maybe citizens are already looking around for your replacement since rumor has it you won’t run again. Is that why you don’t seem to care any more?

For more reading on the staff analysis debate:

Christiansburg, VA Comprehensive Plan and Stormwater/Flooding….Interesting Reading

Why is a Staff Analaysis a good thing for Planning Commission and Town Council to have?

Town of Christiansburg Finance Committee Meeting: 1st Budget Discussion.

Christiansburg VA Town Council Meeting Full of Surprises

INFORMATION NEEDED! Where are the staff reports for land use issues?

Comprehensive Plan vs Comprehensive Plan Map, Reading Between the Lines

Planning Commission Recording

A good use of property but a very bad way to allow it to happen. Rezoning from R-2 to B-3

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Posted by on July 22, 2009 in Citizen Participation, Land Use

 

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Have you been Soiled?

Nah….that’s not what I meant. In a previous post, I noted that there were maps available that show the myriad of soil types found in Christiansburg and how not every property falls into one of the 2 categories discussed in the Comprehensive Plan.

While I had planned on scanning copies of those maps, I found something a bit more useful. The United States Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources Conservation Service has a little old website that provides more and newer information than can be found in that old 1985 document.

The particular site section is the Web Soil Survey. I am not going to lie to you and tell you it is a piece of cake to use. However, with a little bit of effort you can find out some pretty amazing things about what should or shouldn’t be built where based upon type of soil, slope, tendency for concrete to degrade due to chemical nature of soil, and a whole lot of other things.

The whole site is very visual and interactive so anticipate spending a good deal of time waiting for maps to load up.

Once your on the main page, you will find directions for use that explain how to use this tool. (By the way the ‘shopping cart’ is merely a holding place, this is a tool free to the public. Maps that you want to obtain are provided in pdf format that prints out quite well or can be published to a website easily (hmmmm…..wonder where that idea’s going:)

What I found was pretty scary. It shows how very important it is to evaluate each area on it’s own merits and how a generic stormwater system is doomed for failure. Don’t get the idea that what you will find is saying ‘don’t build’ in certain locations. It is simply identifying those areas where special attention MUST be paid to manage potential hazards such as stormwater runoff.

Overall, it clearly shows the importance of soil testing by Town Engineering staff, making sure that plans submitted take these different soil types and slopes into consideration, and that thorough  monitoring is performed by the Town.

It may be the developers responsibility to design and build, but it is the Town’s responsibility to make sure that things are done correctly (not necessarily minimum requirements) and that the safety and well-being of its citizens are the focus of deliberations and decisions.

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Posted by on June 4, 2009 in Citizen Participation, Environment, Land Use

 

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Planning Commission 6/1/09 available for viewing

http://myvaresources.com/Town%20of%20Cburg/NEWAudioVideo.htm

This is a 3 part video of the 6/1/09 Planning Commission Meeting.

These are the people that the Christiansburg Town Council relies upon for information when it comes to landuse planning decisions. It won’t take long to figure out that New Urbanism is not something that is acknowledged.

Stormwater and flooding issues were brought to the discussion by a couple of the commissioners with one making it clear that the developer, not the town would be responsible for making sure that stormwater was taken care of financially. Fortunately, the clarification of this also puts the onus of responsibility on the Town for making sure that the system designed is adequate. This, in turn means that those certified individuals within the Town will follow up with all the necessary inspections and documenting those as required by law. I have no concerns that this particular individual will do the right thing. He has a history of doing things properly. But, isn’t it comforting to know that the Town will have the legal oversight necessary to protect citizens? It is absolutely amazing how much responsibility the Town has in enforcing things are done properly.

The never-ending saga of Sage Lane was discussed and the Planning Commission determined it was the right use of the land. The final decision will be up to Town Council Tuesday at 7:30 pm at Town Hall.

There is an extra bonus in Part 3 where one Commissioner noted that the citizen’s website where public documents are posted, isn’t worth going to because it is so negative about Town Council and Planning Commission. You know, I never would have thought that the Town Code, Town Charter, Town Council Agendas, Town Council Minutes, Planning Commission Agenda, Planning Commission Minutes (years of those are still missing….ironically at about the time decisions were being made about the Aquatic Center), Comprehensive Plan, Parks and Recreations Plans, Budgets, and other such information would be seen as casting a negative light on Planning Commission or Town Council. That darned FOIA (Freedom of Information Act) just keeps getting in some people’s way. Oh well! Ya just can’t please everybody.

Get yourself some popcorn and a soda, kick back and enjoy the show.

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Posted by on June 1, 2009 in FOIA, Land Use

 

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Why is a Staff Analaysis a good thing for Planning Commission and Town Council to have?

I’ve previously discussed the importance of a document called a Staff Analysis that is provided to the Planning Commission, and through them, to the Town Council. Unfortunately, the Town of Christiansburg’s government officials do not feel this is important.

Town of Christiansburg Finance Committee Meeting: 1st Budget Discussion.

Christiansburg VA Town Council Meeting Full of Surprises

INFORMATION NEEDED! Where are the staff reports for land use issues?

Comprehensive Plan vs Comprehensive Plan Map, Reading Between the Lines

Planning Commission Recording

A good use of property but a very bad way to allow it to happen. Rezoning from R-2 to B-3

These documents contain information that is crucial for elected officials to make educated and responsible land use decisions.

In order to show you what I mean, I found some good samples from the website of other jurisdictions. If you get a chance to look at one or two you will have a better idea of what I have been talking about.

City of Chesapeake Department of Planning Post Office Box 15225 Chesapeake, Virginia 23328-5225

CITY OF GLENDALE PLANNING DEPARTMENT DESIGN REVIEW STAFF REPORT CONTEXT

STAFF ANALYSIS REPORT

Montgomery County, VA: Planning: Planning Commission: Archives: Staff Analysis: Sarah M. Wall SUP

Attachment C Staff Analysis LAKE MANASSAS OVERLOOK/SAM JONES PROPERTY

As you can see, there is a consistent pattern. Students in Planning Programs throughout the country are taught how to do this. In other words, it is standard practice in the profession and standard practice in local government.

Next time you get a chance ask one of your Town Council or Planning Commission for information such as you see in the documents but related to a land use issue here. Could they answer that question? If not, is it in a report that they can look at before they make their decision. (Oops…that would also mean the Town Council and Planning Commission would need to have the folders of information more than 5 minutes before the meeting begins…..another inconvenience.)

Listen to the audio and video recordings of Planning Commission and Town Council meetings to see if these types of information are even brought forward, much less used in the decision-making process. This one document, if prepared honestly by the planning department, could provide Town Council with a much better understanding of how the decisions they make will affect the town. Those decisions should be made using this rather than solely on whether or not the proposed zoning, rezoning, or conditional use permit will bring tax money into the town.

Of course, there is one drawback to such a document. It becomes a part of the official record and the public can then have access. It sure seems that Town of Christiansburg goes to extreme efforts to keep people from knowing what is going on. If the land use decision that made has a negative impact on you, wouldn’t you like to know that all issues had been looked at and that there was a legitimate reason for your loss?

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Posted by on May 24, 2009 in Citizen Participation, FOIA, Land Use

 

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