Even the Planning Commissioners weren’t told what company “Project Max” is, because
the Development Authority is still bidding the location as one of two
being considered by the company.
See also the
agenda
the
previous update.
Planning Commissioners did have quite a few questions about expansion, appropriate zoning, any potential pollution or contamination, etc.
Naturally, the Planning Commission recommended approval,
so the actual decision will be before the County Commission
next Tuesday evening. Meanwhile, here are links to the LAKE videos of the Planning Commission, with a few notes, followed by a video playlist. Continue reading
Tag Archives: Lowndes County
Update: Heavy Manufacturing site provided by Langdale @ GLPC Special 2016-01-05
We still don’t know what company
might locate on Rocky Ford Road,
but we’re told it’s clean,
needs water to cool its boiler which will be fired by natural gas,
that it rejected Bassford Business Park because of air quality
(too near Sterling Chemical?), and we have the location of the new site,
which turns out to be on
land owned by Langdale Capital Assets, Inc.
Speaking for the rezoning from the Development Authority were Executive Director Andrea Schruijer, Industry Coordinator Stan Crance, and Chairman Tom Call. Every Lowndes County Commissioner was present. When asked how an agenda the same day was enough notice, Lowndes County Planner Jason Davenport said the Special Called Meeting was actually announced in the Valdosta Daily Times last week. Also that the rezoning will only take effect if the Development Authority buys the land first. Gretchen asked a few questions about parking: if the business is going to expand, will there be enough? Someone told Gretchen that the company would have solar power.
We shall see. And you will be able to see this meeting by tomorrow in the LAKE videos Gretchen took. Continue reading
Cemetery again, sewer, billboards, dwelling, parking @ ZBOA 2016-01-05
2:30 PM today, the Zoning Board of Appeals
agenda
has a proposed cemetery and name badges back on it, plus some new cases,
including another Valdosta sanitary sewer variance, a billboard variance, and others.
Valdosta-Lowndes County Zoning Board of Appeals
Carmella Braswell, Lowndes County Zoning Administrator
327 North Ashley Street, Valdosta, Georgia
(229) 671-2430Matt Martin, Valdosta Planning and Zoning Administrator
300 North Lee Street, Valdosta, Georgia
(229) 259-3563AGENDA
Continue reading
January 5, 2016
2:30 p.m.
Videos: Cell tower, cemetery, sewer, and radio tower @ ZBOA 2015-12-01
Videos of the
December 2015 ZBOA meeting.
The cemetery item got tabled and is
back on today’s agenda.
Here’s a video playlist:
Videos: Cell tower, cemetery, sewer, and radio tower
Regular Session, Valdosta-Lowndes County Zoning Board of Appeals (ZBOA),
Video by Gretchen Quarterman for Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange (LAKE),
Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia, 1 December 2015.
-jsq
Heavy Manufacturing rezoning on special called Planning Commission agenda @ GLPC Special 2016-01-05
Update 7:30 PM 5 Jan 2016: The land is owned by Langdale, and why not Bassford Business Park.
Henry Manufacturing (the one in Oregon? Decatur, GA?) on the agenda for a Special Called Meeting of the Planning Commission, just announced today, for 5:30 PM today. Apparently the Development Authority thinks it’s landed a big fish and wants a rezoning for it. Which 134 acres on Rocky Ford Road is not clear: there’s no such size tract according to the Tax Assessors’ map.
All the large tracts are owned either by Langdale Company or a Langdale investment corporation. Or it could be out of the 219.99 acre tract owned by the Paine Clarence M. Family Trust or the 187.76 acre tract owned by Griffin LLC. As usual, we the taxpayers are left guessing. Tonight at 5:30 PM maybe we’ll find out. -jsq Continue reading
NAACP Reactivation Meeting, Valdosta Chapter, 2016-01-06
Received today (PDF). -jsq
Continue readingRe-Activation Meeting for the
Valdosta Chapter
We are looking for new members to relaunch this chapter.
Please come and join us!!!!!!When: January 6, 2016 @ 7pm
Where: Greater St. Peter Methodist Church
500 E Gordon Street
Valdosta, GA 31601Who: Reactivation Executive Committee
For more information email:
Mrs. Angela Penn at agpenn28@gnail.com,
Pastor Darren Ncal at rcvncal@icloud.coni, or
Dr. Gerald Williams at drgeraldwilliams@yahoo.con
Colleton Solar Farm: South Carolina’s largest
South Carolina’s largest solar farm generated 5% more power
than planned
in its first year (2014), and demonstrated that
tracking mounts provide more power in the late afternoon at peak
air conditioning use time.
It took only nine weeks to build, far faster than any pipeline or nuclear project, and you could build enough of these solar farms to produce more energy
in less time than it would take just to permit either of those, much less build them.
However, Santee Cooper could do better about enabling others to install and connect solar power.
Right now, Santee Cooper is making even Duke Energy look good.
Santee Cooper, 24 January 2014, South Carolina’s largest solar farm introduced to the public, Continue reading
First Miller Bus. Park occupant: Nature Nate
An organic food company is the first thing it finally lands, after trying for years to lure traditional “industrial” businesses to Miller Business Park, and after the Industrial Authority renamed itself the Development Authority. Well, go real food! And congratulations Development Authority! For more local agriculture, come to South Georgia Growing Local Saturday 26 February 2016 at Pine Grove Middle School.
Valdosta, Georgia — December 15, 2015—The Valdosta-Lowndes Development Authority (VLCDA) and Nature Nate’s announce the expansion of Nature Nate’s honey processing operations to Valdosta, GA. The project represents a $1.75 million investment, will create 10 jobs immediately and at least 15 jobs after 36 months.
“We welcome Nature Nate’s as our first tenant within Miller Business Park and Continue reading
Solar steals sunlight from plants! High school science teacher and Woodland, NC town council agree
Update 2015-12-23: There’s more to the story
Photosynthesis fails near solar panels,
thinks a high school science teacher.
And the
Woodland, NC Town Council not only agreed with her and rejected
a rezoning proposal for a solar farm, it passed
a moratorium on future solar farms.
Yet I bet they have fields all around sprayed with Roundup and other
cancer-causing chemicals that actually do affect plants, animals, and people.
Roanoke-Chowan News-Herald, Woodland rejects solar farm,
Jane Mann said she is a local native and is concerned about the natural vegetation that makes the community beautiful.
She is a retired Northampton science teacher and is concerned that photosynthesis, which depends upon sunlight, would not happen and would keep the vegetation from growing. She said she has observed areas near solar panels where vegetation is brown and dead because it did not receive enough sunlight.
She also questioned the high number of cancer deaths in the area, saying no one could tell her that solar panels didn’t cause cancer.
“I want to know what’s going to happen,” she said. “I want information. Enough is enough. I don’t see the profit for the town.
“People come with hidden agendas,” she said. “Until we can find if anything is going to damage this community, we shouldn’t sign any paper.”
I guess she never noticed all the plants near Monsanto-seed fields are dead, most of the birds are gone, and all her students are fat from eating processed foods stuffed with high fructose corn syrup. But sure, solar panels are the problem.
Another local citizen brought up a real economic problem, but blamed the wrong culprit.
Bobby Mann said he watched communities dry up when I-95 came along and warned that would happen to Woodland because of the solar farms.
As Eric Berger pointed out in ars technical, there don’t actually seem to be any solar farms now in or near Woodland, NC.
Back to Bobby Mann:
“You’re killing your town,” he said. “All the young people are going to move out.”
Well, there is a real problem with rural communities losing jobs and citizens to cities. But he’s pointing at the wrong culprit.
He said the solar farms would suck up all the energy from the sun and businesses would not come to Woodland.
I wonder what advertising your local government acts on wildly inaccurate misinformation will do to businesses thinking about locating in Woodland?
This is what happens when people believe corporate propaganda:
Mayor Kenneth Manual called for the vote, which was 3-1 against rezoning the land (the mayor only votes in case of a tie).
The council later voted for a moratorium on future solar farms.
I’d guess businesses would go somewhere else, after the many news stories about this incident.
-jsq
Causes 2016: mini-film festival at VSU 2016-01-23
Anybody can enter; they’ve been reaching out to everybody.
90 seconds of video (or narration over stills)
on your favorite subject! PDF.
Dr. Matthew Richard says:
Causes 5 is Jan. 23, 2016 at 7 pm in Bailey Auditorium on campus! come one, come all!
-jsq
A “mini-film festival” celebrating what matters to you most
Have an issue that you’re passionate about?
Submit a 90-second mini-documentary about it; spread awareness about your cause and maybe win a cash pri3e!January 23, 2016
Deadline for film submissions is Continue reading