Katherine
Heerbrandt
Frederick
News Post
Residents
turned out in force for the town
meeting on Aug. 5 to voice their
opinions about the proposed
development that would bring 140 new
housing units to the north end of
town.
Town
commissioner Pat Boyle wants to
annex his 66 acre farm into the town
so that it can be developed by Ed
Smariga, owner of Buckeye
Development. The majority of the
residents who spoke were against
annexation, citing quality of life
issues, and the burdens yet another
development would have on the
town’s schools, stores, services
and traffic. Some residents said
they were not necessarily against
the annexation, provided they could
get some assurance that proposed
improvements to the town were
actually made.
The current
plan proposes 12 acres be developed
at medium density and 44 acres at
low density. Mr. Smariga wants to
build a total of 65 houses and 75
townhouses. Another 8.5 acres is
earmarked for open space, while the
remaining 1.5 acres is a business
property.
A vote on
the annexation was postponed to the
Aug. 29 meeting so that developer,
Mr Smariga, could investigate the
costs of water line improvements
along North Seton Avenue.
Meanwhile, a
loosely organized group of citizens
is gearing up to petition for a
referendum if the commissioners vote
for annexation. A petition for
referendum requires the signatures
of at least 20 percent of the
town’s estimated 1,100 registered
voters.
Amy
Phillips, a three year resident,
said she and her husband Larry moved
to Emmitsburg to get away from
sprawling growth. She is concerned
that the town does not have the
services and stores to accommodate
the growth that is threatening her
new hometown.
"They
are going to want more facilities
and we just don’t have them,"
she said.
She added
that she is willing to do the
legwork required to get a petition
started and planned to speak to town
planner, Jim Gugel.
Mr. Phillips
is distrustful of developer's
promises. "There is a part of
history of developers not meeting
their commitments," he said. He
said he is unfamiliar with Buckeye
Development's history and was
referring to developers in general.
The crunch
on school enrollment is a big
concern, said 11year resident Glenn
Blanchard, a teacher at Catoctin
High School, said that his classes
are already crowded. "The
enrollment at CHS is at 71 percent
capacity, while Thurmont Middle is
at 80 per, cent capacity. I have an
average of 30 students in my classes
already. With 300 new homes going in
on the west side of town, and
Thurmont growing, do we really need
to be at or over 100 percent
capacity so soon?' he asked.
Longtime
resident Stephanie Harrington agreed
with Mr. Blanchard's assessment.
"I don’t think that we should
develop more housing than the
schools can handle," she said.
Ms. Harrington a school teacher at
Ballenger Creek Elementary School,
expressed concern about the capacity
of the water lines and the
additional traffic. "It's not
that I don’t want the town to
grow, it’s just that I don’t
think the town can handle another
development right now. I would
rather see more business and
industry come to town"
Susie Glass,
a business owner, and lifelong
resident, said she is not against
annexation, but added that it is
going to be developed, I want the
town to have some control over how
it is developed."
Mr.
Blanchard said that ideally,. he
would like to see the development
stopped altogether, but barring
that, a lower density development
would be acceptable.
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