Lake Kilby – Care4Suffolk https://care4suffolk.org Thu, 02 Nov 2023 15:44:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://care4suffolk.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/cropped-Care4Suffolk-32x32.png Lake Kilby – Care4Suffolk https://care4suffolk.org 32 32 Road Safety in Suffolk https://care4suffolk.org/2023/11/02/road-safety-in-suffolk/ https://care4suffolk.org/2023/11/02/road-safety-in-suffolk/#respond Thu, 02 Nov 2023 15:12:59 +0000 https://care4suffolk.org/?p=3012 Read More »Road Safety in Suffolk]]>

Most people in Suffolk have probably heard about the school bus that overturned on Cypress Chapel Road on October 16th with twelve children on board. According to news sources, the bus driver and 12 children were taken to an area hospital and at least one child underwent emergency surgery.  While the cause of the accident is still unknown right now, we do know that this is a narrow, rural road. School bus drivers brave these kinds of roads everyday in our city and this situation highlights the risk involved. 

When the rezoning application, Lake Kilby Road rezoning request (RZN2021-018), came before the city earlier this year, Care4Suffolk opposed this rezoning on the basis of over-crowded schools and unsafe roads. During this rezoning, the topic of school bus safety on rural roads came up. We wrote about this in a March post

The developer offered to widen the road in front of this proposed development, but only to 20 feet (from 16 feet) by extending pavement right to the edge of the existing ditches. The lawyer for the developer, Grady Palmer, stated at the Planning Commission, “We understand, that’s not standard. We wish we could do standard, but we can’t do standard. But 20 feet, and the way I think about this as a lawyer, can two school buses pass each other safely on 20 feet of pavement. I think the answer to that question is yes.” (Source: Planning Commission Meeting video mark 2:39:34-2:39:55)

 

This Suffolk school bus was measured from its widest points: side mirror to side mirror. The bus measures almost 9 feet 7 inches.

During the City Council Meeting on August 16, Council Member Fawcett called a city employee to the podium to ask him questions in an effort to discredit our research. The city employee stated that school buses are about 8 ½ feet wide and that he did not know of any incidents involving school buses on our roads during the school year. In actuality, Suffolk school buses measure 9 feet 7 inches from mirror to mirror, the widest points. The city employee may not have known of any accidents involving buses, but that doesn’t mean there haven’t been any, it just means the city didn’t bother to investigate these issues.  

We filed a Freedom of Information Act request with the city and found that there were, in fact, over 56 incidents involving school buses throughout Suffolk last school year. There were sixteen incidents of buses being struck by other vehicles and eight incidents of a bus in a ditch. Accidents can happen anywhere for a variety of reasons. Collisions with other vehicles and buses flipping into a ditch are far more likely to lead to injuries. Narrow roads, with no shoulders, and steep ditches along the sides leave no room for error when something unexpected happens. 

The information sheet below was provided to the city in opposition to the Lake Kilby rezoning application. It states the basic standard requirements from the City of Suffolk’s Unified Development Ordinance (UDO), the legal codes set forth by the city. The sheet below demonstrates the standards that the city is ignoring regarding road width and design standards for the amount of current and future traffic.

The diagram below demonstrates the road updates the developer was proffering. Developers improving roads below standards does not fix the problem of having lanes that are too narrow and ditches directly adjacent to the road. 

The city may not have the funds to widen all of Suffolk’s many narrow, country roads, but it is well within their power to prevent large developments on these types of roads. That new development on Lake Kilby that just passed will be adding 200 homes and 2,000 more vehicle trips per day. Many tractor trailers already use this road as a cut-through, and many more are coming to our vicinity with new warehouses recently built and in works. 

More vehicles equals more chances for accidents. If the City can’t fix the roads, for the safety of its citizens, it has two other options: require proffers from developers that will actually bring the roads up to standards or do NOT approve rezonings on these roads. The City of Suffolk needs to think of safety first; the safety of its citizens and the safety of our children. 

 
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Errors, Omissions & Discrepancies https://care4suffolk.org/2023/08/15/errors-and-omissions/ https://care4suffolk.org/2023/08/15/errors-and-omissions/#comments Tue, 15 Aug 2023 14:49:46 +0000 https://care4suffolk.org/?p=2791 Read More »Errors, Omissions & Discrepancies]]>

Citizens require transparency and thoroughness from their government. The Public can not be informed and involved if the government does not provide all necessary information. It is a minimum. When the government fails to fully disclose information, makes the process cumbersome or convoluted, or ignores important details in the name of time or labor saving, then the Public suffers. 


Unfortunately, with REZONING REQUEST, RZN2021-00018, (Conditional), Lake Kilby Shores, this is what has happened. There have been a slew of errors, omissions, and discrepancies. City Council should vote NO to this rezoning request for this reasons alone. Below they are itemized:

Prior to First Planning Commission Meeting:

 

➢ No street address was listed in Public Notices.

  • The notice listed only parcel IDs, which makes it very difficult for the Public to know where this property is located and therefore assess its impact.

➢ Planning Department approved developer’s traffic study despite it being out of date, containing errors, and missing important data on the two nearest intersections.

  • The Planning Department recommended approval of the Kilby rezoning based on bad data at the second Planning Commission meeting.

  • Today, the Planning Department knows the data is bad.  They should retract their approval and require the developer to resubmit a thorough, complete study.

  • There are conflicting statements from the developer regarding the widening of Kilby: We will widen the road to a minimum 20 ft vs. We will widen the road up to 20 ft within the available right of way.

  • Additionally, the study was done during the pandemic when traffic was greatly reduced. No effort was made to provide up-to-date traffic data in the Traffic Study. 

  • A proper traffic study would have (and should have) identified these limitations.  

➢ The developer’s “narrative” provided to the Planning Department, included in the Staff Report packet, makes unsupported claims that were never questioned by anyone:

  • It states that, “In a review of the City’s available homes for sale, as well as discussing with realtors, there is still a deficit in supply of detached single family homes.”  There is no supporting evidence or statistics to back up this claim.

➢ The narrative also states that, “Due to the rather low comparative density, the applicant is not submitting a proffer limiting the number of units in the project. The final number of units will be determined in the engineering phase.”

  • This is confusing because there is a listed proffer of 204 homes. We pointed out this contradiction to Planning, but they did not encourage the developer to fix this sloppy error.

At the March 21, 2023 Planning Commission Meeting:

➢ Order of agenda items was changed with short notice.

  • Caused the Public Hearing to be significantly later, impacting more than 100 citizens that attended.

➢ Developer removed a small wedge parcel from the proposed plan in order to prevent connectivity and Planning Department recommended rezoning despite connectivity being an established practice in city planning. Connectivity is safer and more cost effective for citizens.

  • On October 18, 2023, the Planning Department recommended denial of the rezoning application on the basis of non-connectivity.

  • The developer removing this small portion of land was done to intentionally skirt the best practices in city planning that requires adjacent developments to connect roads.

➢ The Planning Department presented slides with the developer’s road section analysis, which had not been made available to the public.

 

➢ The proffers state the the houses will be a minimum of 1850 sq ft, however, the Fiscal Impact Study uses 2720 sq ft for calculations.

  • This creates a big difference in cost of building materials and tax revenue.

At April 19, 2023 City Council Meeting:

➢ On April 18th, the day before City Council, the developer requested a 120–day deferral with the only reason being “for the Council to have sufficient time to evaluate the application prior to voting on it.”

  • City Council did not have to approve this deferral, but they did; a public hearing was still held and they also voted to schedule a second public hearing for August 16th.

  • The developer has played games with a lot of peoples’ time and our City Council let him get away with unnecessarily dragging out this rezoning issue.

➢ The Planning Department used the wrong conceptual site map during his Staff Report presentation (he presented the original one from October 2022, not the one with the 18 acre parcel removed).

  • This could have incorrectly led Council Members and citizens to believe that the proposed development will connect with the development to the north of the property.

➢ Packet was missing photos and several other documents, as well as public comments, that were submitted via the portal.

  • Planning was notified, but did nothing to rectify the situation.

➢ Intentional omission of key parts of the UDO description/purpose statement for Residential Medium zoning:

  • The developer narrative omitted the entire first sentence about RM zoning’s purpose being where “adequate public facilities and services ARE available”.

  • Planning’s Staff Report omitted the entire paragraph from the UDO and instead only quoted the two words “ideally suited.”

➢ Developer proffered any and all possible building materials and foundation types.

  • When every option is proffered, how is the city supposed to plan for or ensure quality of development?

➢Proffers have never been updated to reflect the very large increase in costs for new schools in the City’s current Capital Improvements Program.

 

  • There is also no requirement in the Staff Report to list when any new schools are forecasted to be built—how effective are proffers if a school won’t be replaced for almost a decade and costs are going up by the tens of millions? 

  • Example: Elephant’s Fork Elementary is already at 120% capacity, but not due for replacement until at least 2029 (estimated completion in 2031).

Prior to August 16, 2023 City Council Meeting:

➢ Many public comments and submissions were not included in the City Council packet, again.

 

  • Many citizens are unable to make these public hearings, so they submit their comments via the portal only to have some go missing.

Many of these errors, omissions, and discrepancies were brought to the attention of the Planning Department prior to them making their recommendation for approval, but still remain incorrect or absent. The errors, omissions, and discrepancies all seem to favor the developer. None of this is in the best interest of the citizens of Suffolk. 

 

Care4Suffolk supports growth and development, but it MUST be done responsibility. All of these errors, omissions, and discrepancies should have been corrected. There have been months to fix these, but the Planning Department is content to accept an incomplete traffic study. They gave their recommendation to approve even though the road improvements will not even meet the state’s minimum standards and knowing full well that the developer is avoiding connecting his proposed development with the adjacent development.  Connectivity provides added safety to communities. The Planning Department knows this and is still allowing this. Delay tactics by the developer, including last-minute and lengthy deferrals, along with changes in the agenda order, as well as public comments going missing, have negatively impacted the Public’s ability to be engaged in the process. 

 

The Public requires the Planning Department to fulfill its responsibility and change its recommendation of approval to denial and City Council needs to act in the best interest of the citizens and vote NO to this rezoning on Lake Kilby Road.

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What is Smart Growth? https://care4suffolk.org/2023/07/11/what-is-smart-growth/ https://care4suffolk.org/2023/07/11/what-is-smart-growth/#respond Tue, 11 Jul 2023 16:05:24 +0000 https://care4suffolk.org/?p=2722 Read More »What is Smart Growth?]]>

If you have been following rezoning applications lately, like the one for Lake Kilby Road, then you have probably heard the term ‘Smart Growth’. At the City Council meeting on April 19, 2023, there were people there wearing Smart Growth stickers to support the developer. Many of them were real estate agents there with the Hampton Roads Realtor Association (HRRA). HRRA’s Chairman of the Board mentioned Smart Growth while speaking on behalf of the developer, but did not say anything specific about it. Additionally, a new community group, Smart Grow Suffolk, was recently started. Care4Suffolk has been talking and writing about Smart Growth for months now and believes it aligns with many of our goals and objectives when followed appropriately.

You might be wondering, what is Smart Growth? Why is everyone talking about it? Why is it important? 

Smart Growth is a network of government agencies, civic organizations, citizens, and businesses that share a common goal and theory that development should happen in a controlled, intentional manner that protects the health, safety, and economic well-being of the community. The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) was actually one of the founding members of this network and you can learn more about it on their website

Smart Growth promotes the following ideas:

  • Invest tax payer money wisely in communities and conserve resources by reinvesting in existing infrastructure and rehabilitating historic buildings.

  • Design neighborhoods that have homes near shops, offices, schools, houses of worship, parks, and other amenities; giving residents the option of walking, bicycling, taking public transportation, or driving as they go about their business.

  • Incorporate a range of different housing types to make it possible for individuals and families at all stages of life to find a safe, attractive home they can afford.

  • Enhance neighborhoods and involve residents in development decisions, creating vibrant places to live, work, and play.

  • Creating a high quality of life that makes these communities economically competitive, creates business opportunities, and strengthens the local tax base.

  • Use local food sources to revitalize downtowns and neighborhoods, create economic opportunities, and improve human health and the environment.

  • Preserve open space, farmland, natural beauty, and critical environmental areas.

These are principles of Smart Growth and why Care4Suffolk supports it. It is also a huge part of why we oppose the Lake Kilby rezoning application. The Lake Kilby Road rezoning application wants to turn farmland zoned Rural Estate into high-density suburban sprawl. The proposed houses, by the developer’s own estimate, will cost $500,000 each (hardly affordable), and they will be densely packed homes in a community that the developer is intentionally not adjoining to the abutting neighborhood. These homes will require driving to and from every activity because they are not being built near any amenities and there is no bus stop nearby. The proposed development would be on a busy, narrow, ditch-lined country road, not suitable for walking or biking. It is not a smart investment for the city because the developer is proposing road improvements that do not even meet the state’s minimum for safety standards. It will add family homes in an area with already over-crowded schools. Additionally, this proposed development looks to build on land that contains wetlands, and will drastically alter an area that feeds our reservoirs and provides drinking water to so many in Suffolk and Hampton Roads. The Lake Kilby Road rezoning application fulfills NONE of the bulleted points that comprise Smart Growth, and in fact, it is incompatible with most of them.

Smart Growth is NOT about lining the pockets of a few developers and real estate organizations. It is NOT about encroaching on farmland with suburban sprawl. It is NOT about creating insular housing developments with no connection to the broader community. It is NOT about reducing the quality of life for communities by adding traffic, crowding schools, or destroying natural resources.

Care4Suffolk understands that development will happen and that development can be a positive change in a community and city. To make that happen, those making the decisions need to follow these Smart Growth principles and ensure that the development is positive for the community and will enhance the lives of those already living there. This Lake Kilby Road project is the antithesis of everything that Smart Growth stands for, and that is why Care4Suffolk opposes this rezoning application. A development that benefits only the developer and a few real estate agents is not a project that City Council Members or anyone who supports Smart Growth should ever consider supporting. 

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May Meat Madness https://care4suffolk.org/2023/05/13/may-meat-madness/ https://care4suffolk.org/2023/05/13/may-meat-madness/#respond Sat, 13 May 2023 16:40:02 +0000 https://care4suffolk.org/?p=2606 Read More »May Meat Madness]]>
CARE4Suffolk is organizing another food drive to support the local Salvation Army. The theme for this effort is May Meat Madness! We are asking for donations of canned meats.
 
When:   Sunday, May 21st from 12-3pm – Stay for hot dogs if you can!
Where:  Liberty Lane Farm, 2455 Lake Cohoon Road, Suffolk, VA 23434
What:    Canned Meats (i.e. Vienna Sausages, SPAM, canned tuna or chicken)
 
If you can’t make it on May 21st, please feel free to drop off donations anytime from May 17- May 20th at Liberty Lane Farm on the barn porch.

Please consider downloading the flyer to share with others.

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Let’s Talk Money https://care4suffolk.org/2023/04/05/lets-talk-money/ https://care4suffolk.org/2023/04/05/lets-talk-money/#comments Wed, 05 Apr 2023 05:28:00 +0000 https://care4suffolk.org/?p=2550 Read More »Let’s Talk Money]]>

Let’s talk about the money behind large developments like the one Bob Arnette is proposing on Lake Kilby Road. Now before anyone gets all up in arms about me giving developers and builders a hard time for making money, this is NOT what this about. Developers and builders are necessary, and they are business people trying to make a living. However, if they are asking to rezone to build a large development, the city and its citizens should understand what the big-picture economics of the situation really are.

The developer’s lawyer, Grady Palmer, had a lot to say at the Planning Commission on March 21, 2023. He stated that, “Growth is coming to Suffolk, one way or the other, it’s coming.” (Suffolk Planning Commission Meeting: mark 3:07:00 – 3:07:07). Sure, growth is coming and that isn’t necessarily a bad thing. But just because a city wants to grow, doesn’t mean it needs to rezone every time a developer shows up with a plan. There are other ways to grow besides rezoning farmland to higher density residential; this just happens to be the easiest and fastest way for developers to make money. Our city needs to make sure we are getting a good deal when rezoning because there are costs for us as well. 

Palmer stated, “These applicants, this developer, is making a significant, substantial financial commitment to the city of Suffolk, and this is how you advance capacity. Particularly in the school, is developers funding the advancement of capacity to the tune of $2.6 million and I hope this sets a new standard.” (mark 2:37:57-2:38:19) 

Let’s break this down. The developer would be selling the 204 lots to a large builder at the approximate cost of $120,000 each. The developer will be making about $24,480,000. Let’s take a look at his expenses. He proffered $2.6 million for the schools. He will have to buy the land for about $1 million and build the infrastructure for another $2 million. Let’s give a generous estimate of $800,000 for administrative, legal, and miscellaneous costs. In the end, the developer will end up making about $18 million. With this in mind, the $2.6 million doesn’t seem as significant, nor substantial. It is just part of the cost of doing business. 

Additionally, the builder will make an approximate 7% net profit. With 204 houses at $500,000 each (according to the fiscal impact analysis), that would equal just over $7 million. The developer and builder will be making around $25 million combined. 

Based on the city planner’s staff report, the developer will be paying $13,055.59/house x 204 houses for a total of $2,663,319.96. Proffers are added to rezoning requests to make them more attractive to cities. This looks like a lot of money to you and me and we do have a lot of schools that are desperately over-crowded and in very poor condition. But will this money really alleviate these current problems? The answer is no. Most developments don’t start right away, take years to finish, and the city only gets the money once a certificate of occupancy has been granted. The money won’t be realized for years and, with inflation, the $2.6 million won’t go as far. 

The schools that this development would affect are ALREADY over-crowded. King’s Fork High School is at 104% capacity and Elephant’s Fork Elementary School is over 115% capacity. Both are already beyond what the Facilities Master Plan projected for the year 2024. There are at least 6 nearby developments being built out right now that will feed an additional 260+ students to these already overcrowded schools in the very near future. This proposed Lake Kilby development will add an additional 31 elementary and 23 high school students. That will bring Elephant’s Fork Elementary School capacity to 144%.

The City of Suffolk’s 2024-2033 Capital Improvements Program and Plan (CIP), lists the Elephant’s Fork Elementary School replacement cost at nearly $50 million, with this scheduled to happen between 2029-2033, maybe. Suffolk has a tendency to kick these projects down the road and many of them stay in that 6-10 year plan for a decade or more. There are currently 6 schools on the list for replacement and 2 for expansion. If you consider 6 schools at about $50 million each, that is $300 million to fix this urgent problem. So $2.6 million paid out over several years isn’t even a drop in the bucket. 

The developer isn’t donating this money out of the goodness of his heart to help fund schools. He is proffering the bare minimum he has to– the money the city has estimated it would need to properly provide an education to each new student. We have to ask ourselves if accepting this $2.6 million dollars is worth the devastating impact of adding more students to these schools without a plan in place to expand capacity. 

Bob Arnette is also proffering to widen Lake Kilby Road. I go into this issue here, but to sum it up: he isn’t even willing to improve the road to meet the minimum requirements of the UDO or design standards set by Virginia. His lawyer said this about it: [This developer is making a] “very large commitment to widen Lake Kilby to 20’ wide pavement. We understand, that’s not standard. We wish we could do standard, but we can’t do standard. But 20 feet, and the way I think about this as a lawyer, can two school buses pass each other safely on 20 feet of pavement. I think the answer to that question is yes.”  (mark 2:39:34-2:39:55) Not only is Mr. Arnette’s plan NOT to make the lanes wide enough, but he is also not addressing the needed clear zone, which is an area for cars to safely maneuver to if something enters their lane (like a truck that is wider than its own lane).

Surely he could make the improvements fit the minimum standard, but that would eat into his $18 million profit. But if the city is willing to accept less, why would he bother? Why is the city accepting subpar improvements? It is our duty to hold our city accountable, and our city representatives’ duty to act in OUR best interest. 

Palmer also stated that, “Individual developments have to struggle with issues, and this development is solving as many issues as it can, and more than it should, but that’s the business of development.” (mark 3:07:46  – 3:07:56) The lawyer acknowledges this: developers would prefer not to offer anything and let the citizens pay all the costs their development bring to the city. They don’t really care about the schools or safety of the roads; they are in the business of making money by flipping real estate from lower to higher density residential and then selling to builders, whose kids don’t go to these schools and who don’t have to commute on these roads everyday. We are the ones that have to deal with the aftermath of these large developments. 

CARE4Suffolk is a grassroots organization, made up of regular citizens. Until we came along to shed light on all these problems, the city just kept approving these rezoning applications. We have a housing pipeline of 7,400 approved units waiting to be built. Growth is good, but unchecked irresponsible growth can be devastating. This is why we have overcrowded schools, unsafe roads, and increasing traffic woes. 

Palmer said, “I think Suffolk should be, should be grateful that you’re seeing the growth, seeing the investment, and you’re seeing positive change that these projects like Lake Kilby brings to the community.” (mark 2:34:28 – 2:34:38) This is a laughable statement. He didn’t even mention what the actual positive change would be. He and Bob Arnette should be thanking the City of Suffolk for all the profits their speculative rezoning has raked in over the years at the citizens’ expense.

We shouldn’t be thankful – we should be furious that this situation has been allowed to get this far. Development in Suffolk is happening too quickly and the infrastructure can’t keep up. We are the ones who suffer. 

We need to let City Council (email: council@suffolkva.us) know that we want them to vote NO when the Lake Kilby Road rezoning comes before them on April 19th. It is time to put citizens first!

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Developing on Lake Kilby – Is It Really Smart Growth? https://care4suffolk.org/2023/04/05/developing-on-lake-kilby-is-it-really-smart-growth/ https://care4suffolk.org/2023/04/05/developing-on-lake-kilby-is-it-really-smart-growth/#respond Wed, 05 Apr 2023 01:07:00 +0000 https://care4suffolk.org/?p=2512 Read More »Developing on Lake Kilby – Is It Really Smart Growth?]]>

The Hampton Roads REALTORS Association Chairman of the Board spoke on the developer’s behalf at the March 21st Planning Commission meeting. He touted Smart Growth, but did not specify how rezoning for over 200 homes on Lake Kilby Road would fulfill any of the principles of this planning and development concept. This rezoning would actually contradict almost every Smart Growth principle as listed on the National Association of Realtors website:  

This Lake Kilby development plan fails to address walkable neighborhoods or distinctive, attractive communities with a strong sense of place, or provide a variety of transportation options.  

  • Curb and gutter only along subdivision frontage does not equate to connectivity or walkability.  Rather, it creates an unattractive patchwork of sidewalks that lead to nowhere along a very narrow, highly-trafficked, ditch-lined road.  
  • Widening a critical portion of the road to a width that is below standard is not safe for the projected traffic or bicyclists. Even the developer’s lawyer stated that the proffered “approximate” width of 20 feet with no shoulder is below standard.  

The developer conducted only limited outreach and made no attempt to engage the most concerned neighbors.  There was total disregard for the most important Smart Growth principle of encouraging “community and stakeholder collaboration in development decisions.”

The principle of preserving “open space, farmland, and critical environmental areas” is given no consideration.  The majority of the property is actively farmed, contains wetlands and natural runoff that feeds a drinking water reservoir.  

There is also a major contradiction due to the fact that the developer is intentionally trying to avoid connectivity with the existing subdivision next door.  The Lake Kilby Road rezoning effort was recommended for denial just last October because the developer specifically attached a Subdivision Variance to it, requesting the city waive connection requirements. He is now removing an entire parcel from the plan—just to AVOID CONNECTION with the neighbors.  

I think instead of just vaguely addressing a planning and development theory during a public hearing, the head of a trade organization should be prepared to talk specifically about the issue at hand–especially if his entire group is wearing “Smart Growth” stickers on their shirts. 

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Lake Kilby: More Hazards to Come with Development https://care4suffolk.org/2023/03/26/lake-kilby-more-hazards-to-come-with-development/ https://care4suffolk.org/2023/03/26/lake-kilby-more-hazards-to-come-with-development/#respond Sun, 26 Mar 2023 16:10:17 +0000 https://care4suffolk.org/?p=2439 Read More »Lake Kilby: More Hazards to Come with Development]]>

On March 23, 2023, this van ended up in the ditch on Lake Kilby Road blocking traffic. Lake Kilby is an example of the many narrow country roads in Suffolk that do not meet the minimum standards set forth by VDOT (Virginia Department of Transportation). 

Lake Kilby is a road with lanes that are 8′ wide and with no clear zone. A clear zone, defined by VDOT is “used to describe the unobstructed, traversable area provided beyond the edge of the through traveled way for the recovery of an errant vehicle.” Lake Kilby Road is designated as a minor collector road and should have a minimum of 11′ lanes, but recommended 12′ lanes where trucks or farm equipment use the road, and an 8′ clear zone. (Source: VDOT Road Design Manual)

This is right where a developer wants to put a 200+ housing development that was just recommended by the Suffolk Planning Department and the Suffolk Planning Commission. The developer is proffering to widen the road in front of this proposed new development, but only to 10′ lanes and no expanded clear zone. This doesn’t meet the minimum required by the state. The lawyer for the developer, Grady Palmer, stated last Tuesday at the Planning Commission, “We understand, that’s not standard. We wish we could do standard, but we can’t do standard. But 20 feet, and the way I think about this as a lawyer, can two school buses pass each other safely on 20 feet of pavement. I think the answer to that question is yes.”  ( Source: Planning Commission Meeting video mark 2:39:34-2:39:55)

The developer would only be widening Lake Kilby in front of the development, so it will still only be 8′ lanes in parts, but it will add about 100 new students. So these school buses which are about 8′ wide (source Virginia Public School Bus Specifications) still have to traverse these narrow lanes. Even in front of the development, with only 10′ lanes and not meeting minimum clear zones, should something unexpected happen (inclement weather, farm equipment, vehicle loses control, etc.) there is no place for the school bus to safely veer off. Instead of a Stanley Steamer van, that could be a school bus ending up in a ditch. 

The city can NOT accept sub-standard improvements. The developer is in business to make money and making the roads wide enough to safely accommodate the traffic is not something they are willing to do. We as citizens should not be forced to accept road improvements that do not meet the minimum standards. If the developer will not fix them to the minimum standard, then they should not be allowed to develop there. Our safety and the safety of our children is not worth it. 

This issue isn’t done yet! 

This comes before City Council on April 19. Email City Council (email: council@suffolkva.us) and tell them you do not want this approved. We as citizens can come together and let them know what we want for our city.

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Inconvenient Truth: There is No Housing Shortage https://care4suffolk.org/2023/03/13/inconvenient-truth-there-is-no-housing-shortage/ https://care4suffolk.org/2023/03/13/inconvenient-truth-there-is-no-housing-shortage/#comments Mon, 13 Mar 2023 21:57:31 +0000 https://care4suffolk.org/?p=2357 Read More »Inconvenient Truth: There is No Housing Shortage]]>
Suffolk Citizens:

Last week a regional real estate association distributed a letter to its Suffolk members asking for their attendance at the March 21 Planning Commission meeting to support the approval of a rezoning request on the commission’s agenda. As there are currently only two rezoning requests on the agenda, only RZ2021-00018 (Lake Kilby Road) proposes the development of family homes and can be the subject of the letter.

RZ2021-00018 proposes rezoning 87 acres of land from Rural Estate (RE) to Rural Medium (RM) density and the development of 4.4 homes per acre. In previous proceedings, the application met with citizen opposition, citing level of service deficiencies for already overcrowded schools, inadequate road conditions, and concerns over stormwater runoff causing flooding.

This letter was sent out by a regional real estate association to its Suffolk members.

The letter raised the following points, which must be refuted:

The realtor stated Suffolk has limited housing inventory and without continued lots, we cannot sustain future growth, and the commission must approve RZ2021-00018 in order to have homes available in the community.

This cannot be further from the truth. According to Movoto.com, there are over 800 Suffolk home listings and compared to last year, the days on the market have increased 37% from 46 to 73 and 7% of listings have experienced price reductions. The 2035 Comprehensive Plan set growth for residential units to 522 per year. The current residential pipeline has 7,480 housing units approved but not yet built, which accounts for 19-years of projected population growth. Additional rezoning is unnecessary to maintain housing inventory and the Planning Commission must focus on the development of land already zoned for residential development. The cover e-mail for the letter showed some realtors are interested in continuing the rapid sales seen over the past couple years, citing 800 new construction homes were closed on last year, significantly higher than the growth set by the 2035 Comprehensive Plan.

According to the realtor, a limited inventory will drive up the cost of homes, making it unaffordable for young and average families.

According to Movoto.com, the median cost of a home in Suffolk is $412K. The city statistics show an average household income of $81K. Even with a good credit score and 20% down payment, young and average families cannot afford to purchase the proposed homes, which are forecasted to sell for an average of $500K. There are many factors making home buying unaffordable, such as inflation and interest rate increases, which reduce the purchasing power of a young or average family, and is not eliminated with zoning changes.

The realtor put forth that to build schools, roads, and other infrastructure, we need growth to collect real estate, personal property, and sales taxes.

Growth requires additional city services, which are currently stressed. The city is struggling to maintain an adequate level of service for schools, roads, stormwater runoff, and other infrastructure to support current communities, and cannot meet levels of services for additional development already in the pipeline. The city’s planned infrastructure improvements are years out. The Unified Development Ordinance (UDO) requires the level of service to be concurrent with the impact of development. The city needs to take a pause on rezoning additional land until development in the pipeline is met with adequate levels of service. As we add more citizens, we will add additional stress to the already overstressed infrastructure.

This was the cover email sent out by a regional real estate association to its Suffolk members.

The realtor’s cover e-mail related that the association knows the importance of “Smart Growth”, supporting rezoning in Suffolk for new communities, and calls out that CARE4Suffolk is opposing rezoning because the organization does not want more communities built in Suffolk.

According to the EPA, “Smart Growth” approaches include conserving resources by reinvesting in existing infrastructure and involving residents in development decisions. It stresses the importance of balancing health, schools, taxes, traffic, the environment, economic growth, and fairness in development decisions. Similarly, the CARE4Suffolk mission supports responsible growth, where the citizens of Suffolk will receive the level of service expected to maintain our quality of life. We understand the importance of growth and change and want it to occur responsibly with the city ensuring the infrastructure is in place, including schools, roads, and public utilities, prior to rezoning and development. We also want to preserve our wetlands and the areas around our reservoirs, which serve as our drinking water, and a precious resource for all of Hampton Roads.

The letter showed some realtors value having additional homes to produce sales as a higher priority in Suffolk than having safe roads and adequate school capacity. The city must consider the needs of all citizens and not merely some developers and realtors who stand to profit from irresponsible development. CARE4Suffolk calls for the city to take a pause on rezoning until there is a reduction in the pipeline and the city’s infrastructure can provide adequate levels of services as laid out in the UDO and the Comprehensive Plan. To learn more about this rezoning request, click here

Dr. Sherri L. Johnston
Executive Director
CARE4Suffolk.org
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Future Growth on Lake Kilby Rd? https://care4suffolk.org/2023/03/06/future-growth-on-lake-kilby-rd/ https://care4suffolk.org/2023/03/06/future-growth-on-lake-kilby-rd/#comments Mon, 06 Mar 2023 18:15:05 +0000 https://care4suffolk.org/?p=2242 Read More »Future Growth on Lake Kilby Rd?]]>

Last October a developer requested to rezone a parcel of land right on Lake Kilby Road (RZN2021-00018). The developer wished to rezone the land from agricultural to medium density residential and build a housing development of 225 homes on 106 acres of farmland.  

The development in the request would be built just south of a development called Pitchkettle Farms. Pitchkettle Farms is zoned low residential density and has 112 houses, some with half-acre lots. To secure the support of the Pitchkettle Farms HOA, the developer agreed to ask for a variance, which was another item on the October Planning Commission agenda. 

Good city planning practices require an interconnectivity of streets. So new neighborhoods built next to established neighborhoods connect by way of connection stubs. When Pitchkettle Farms was approved, it included the required connection point to join any future development. 

The developer requested this a variance to normal city planning requirements because the Pitchkettle Farm neighborhood was, understandably so, not excited to be connecting to a new development with twice the number of homes, all of whom could be using their main street, Pitchkettle Farm Lane, to access Pitchkettle Road. Who wants to add that much traffic to their small neighborhood street?

However, there are many good reasons to make sure in city planning that roads connect. It reduces traffic congestion, provides continuous and more direct routes, increases safety for pedestrians and bicyclists, improves EMS vehicle access and response times, improves quality of utility connections and increases efficiency for public services like school buses and trash collection. For all of these reasons, the variance request was denied, and rightfully so.

Above is the original plan for the proposed development. Each yellow box represents a lot. At the top of the graphic, there is a row of lots, and in the middle of that row, there is a yellow line separating two housing lots. That line is where the neighborhoods should be connected by city standards. 

The variance was requested to appease the Pitchkettle Farm HOA and gain their support for the new development. When the variance was denied, the HOA President no longer supported the new development. The developer has a long history of looking for support from HOA boards from neighboring developments. To get their support this time, he has redesigned the development so that the neighborhood barely connects (just a small little corner!) Thus he is hoping to avoid the issue altogether.

Above is the new plan. You can see a wedge piece of land removed from the top portion, so that it now has only the slightest connection with Pitchkettle Farms (north of proposed development), presumably to connect in with their public utilities, but avoid the road connectivity that the city requires.

The new development would be 204 houses on 87 acres of farmland.

When I sit here looking at the new plan, two questions spring to mind. The first is, what is the developer’s plan with that wedge slice of land? I notice the houses don’t follow the road all the way to the exit. Could it be that he plans to continue that road in the future? If so, he will likely be required by the city to connect the wedge piece to both developments, and there is plenty of room for a road to make that connection and to throw a couple dozen more houses there as well. 

My second question is what happened to the road from the first plan in the northeast portion. That road was designed to connect to the commerce park area (already rezoned!) but there is a cul-de-sac in the new plan. Will that stay a cul-de-sac or will that connect to the commerce park? In case you are curious, areas zoned commerce park in Suffolk, by right, can contain: offices, office warehouses, or research and development facilities.

Above is a rendering of what could be in-store soon for those on Lake Kilby Rd. Lake Kilby Rd is a narrow country road, with flooding issues and large trucks that are unable to safely pass other traffic (see here and here.) In addition, both Elephant’s Fork Elementary and King’s Fork High School (the schools for this new development) are already overcrowded, without the added 204 houses this would bring. 

Is this what we want to see for the future of Suffolk? Hundreds of houses pack on small parcels of land, with inadequate public services to provide for the citizens? If we do nothing, this is likely what we will see just down the road. If you want to stop this, join with CARE4Suffolk and help us let the city know we do not want this.

 

Important Information

Planning Commission Meeting, Tuesday, March 21 at 2pm at City Hall is at 442 W. Washington St. 

Sign our petition to let the city know what you think.

Email the City Planning Department direct – planningemail@suffolkva.us

Email City Council direct – council@suffolkva.us

Call City Planning – 757-514-4060

Follow us at CARE4Suffolk.org

To receive email updates, please complete this form.
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Update Lake Kilby Road Rezoning Request https://care4suffolk.org/2023/03/03/update-lake-kilby-road-rezoning-request/ https://care4suffolk.org/2023/03/03/update-lake-kilby-road-rezoning-request/#respond Fri, 03 Mar 2023 15:43:10 +0000 https://care4suffolk.org/?p=2188 Read More »Update Lake Kilby Road Rezoning Request]]>
The blue rezoning signs should be popping up any day now on Lake Kilby Road.  The Planning Commission public hearing for the Lake Kilby/Lake Cohoon Road rezoning effort (RZN2021-0018) is only a few weeks away (March 21st, 2pm at City Hall). We need as many people as possible to attend this meeting (wear a blue shirt!). They will vote to recommend approval or denial and City Council will take this into consideration when they make the final vote on it in April. 
 
We still have an online petition that will get printed out and shared with the city. Please check out the link, sign it and pass it along! We appreciate comments on the petition, too!
 

A developer is requesting to rezone 87 acres on Lake Kilby and Lake Cohoon Roads from Rural Estate to Residential Medium Density to allow for 204 cluster style homes.  Rural Estate allows for 1 house for every 3 acres.  Residential Medium zoning allows for 4 houses per acre.

Local residents oppose this rezoning because our narrow, rural roads are already crowded and dangerous. According to VDOT, our impacted roads see about 1,200 vehicle trips per day. This proposed development would bring more than 2,000 additional daily vehicle trips. That number does not include delivery trucks and other service-related vehicles.

The public schools for this area are overcrowded. Elephant’s Fork Elementary is already at 110% capacity.  It is listed as a school with most needs and has a poor facility condition per the Joint School Board Presentation. Kings Fork High School is at 104% capacity

City Council has already approved more than 7,400 housing units across Suffolk that have not yet been built.  We don’t need anymore new residential units in Suffolk.

This rezoning effort will go before Planning Commission for consideration 21 March 2023 at 2 PM.

Please help stop this rezoning by attending on March 21st and by signing this petition!

Thank you!

Important Contact Information

City Hall is at 442 W. Washington St 

Email the City Planning Department direct – planningemail@suffolkva.us

Email City Council direct – council@suffolkva.us

Call City Planning – 757-514-4060

Follow us at CARE4Suffolk.org

To receive email updates, please complete this form.
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