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Middlesex CountyMiddlesex County may abandon road threatened by weak damThe Middlesex County Board of Supervisors wants to abandon the section of Stormont Road (Route 629) that crosses Healy’s Millpond dam near Hartfield. A public hearing on the matter will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, June 15, at the historic courthouse in Saluda. The road is threatened by a privately owned dam that is expected to collapse unless it is repaired. The dam has a five-inch hole and the earthen portion of the structure is unsound. If the supervisors vote to abandon the road, rights-of-way will revert to landowners adjoining the road. Read more in The Southside Sentinel.... Posted on Friday, June 11, 2010 - 8:24am
Middlesex homeowners urge officials to look beyond property taxesMore than 30 citizens spoke against a proposed 34% real estate tax hike included in the proposed 2011 Middlesex County budget. The current tax rate is 35 cents per $100 of value; the proposed rate is 47 cents per $100. County officials say the extra tax revenue is needed to rebuild the the county fund balance, which is used as a reserve to pay bills between tax collections. The proposed budget totals $19 million and does not increase funds for the schools. Property owners urged the board to consider other ways to raise money, such as a meal tax or taxes on personal property. Some also suggested that the budget could be trimmed. Read more in the Southside Sentinel.... Posted on Wednesday, April 28, 2010 - 8:30pm
State Approves Sewage Treatment Plant Permit in MiddlesexToday the State Water Control Board approved a discharge permit for a wastewater treatment plant in Middlesex County, according to the Southside Sentinel. Although many residents were concerned about this permit being approved, county officials are working towards other solutions for disposing of the wastewater, including land disposal. The new plant will help to prepare for future growth, which is great for homeowners and the value of their property, "On Monday afternoon, a unanimous State Water Control Board (SWCB) approved a discharge permit for a 39,900-gallons-per-day (GPD) treatment plant to serve the Middlesex Courthouse, county offices and part of Saluda. The treatment plant would discharge into Urbanna Creek and has been opposed by Urbanna area residents who contend the treatment plant will further pollute the creek." Posted on Monday, November 2, 2009 - 8:28pm
How will Hampton Roads Home Values Be Affected by Foreclosures
Assessors will be considering short sales and bank sales in a neighborhood's reassessment if those sales dominate the market, so the magnitude of foreclosures on property values will be neighborhood by neighborhood. Many cities and counties in the Hampton Roads area have assessments coming up in the next few months and will be faced with addressing this issue. Homeowners should be prepared for how foreclosures in their neighborhood might affect their home values. "Neighborhoods stricken by foreclosures might see that reflected in home values in some Hampton Roads cities. Foreclosures historically have been ruled out in determining home value. But times have changed in areas plagued by foreclosures. 'Never in the history of appraising have I heard this before, but people are starting to take foreclosures into consideration,' Newport News Assessor Chuck Young said. 'This is something we're going to have to consider. We don't have a choice.' Assessor's offices in Hampton and Newport News will consider bank sales and short sales in a neighborhood's reassessment if those sales dominated the market, both Young and Hampton Assessor Brian E. Gordineer said. Newport News is just beginning its assessment process. 'It's a little too early to discuss which neighborhoods will be affected,' Young said. 'We aren't far enough along to make those decisions because we haven't dealt with it before.' Hampton is in the midst of conducting a sales analysis that will wrap up Dec. 31. 'At this point we have not seen individual assessment neighborhoods where foreclosure sales dominate any individual markets,' Gordineer said. In nearby Williamsburg and Poquoson and Isle of Wight, York and James City counties, though, foreclosures aren't being used to determine value. Those counties and smaller cities have seen foreclosures, but not in clusters or in numbers big enough to affect the market, assessing officers said. Gloucester County is finalizing a reassessment effective Jan. 1. County Assessor Reese Milligan said the county hasn't used foreclosure-related transactions as direct comparisons, but is trying to gauge the overall influence of foreclosures on the market. In Mathews County, the next reassessment will be effective in 2011, and Middlesex County's next reassessment will be effective in 2012. Assessing officers around the country are grappling with how to handle a spike in foreclosures in parts of the U.S."
Posted on Wednesday, October 14, 2009 - 2:06pm
Chesapeake Bay Reports Call For More Livestock, Runoff RegulationsLast week federal officials released parts of a strategy to restore the Chesapeake Bay, according to NewsDay.com. The report focuses on expanding regulation of large-scale animal farms and municipal stormwater runoff. Although details of the expanded regulations have not been decided, the report did mention that federal leadership and "muscle" would be used when necessary to enforce the new regulations. This report, along with others wll be used to develop a bay restoration strategy scheduled for release on Novemeber 9th. Because many of the Virginia localities in the Chesapeake Watershed are heavily farmed areas, many Virginia property owners could be affected. Property owners will need to ensure that their rights are protected in the process of restoring the Chesapeake Bay. "Federal officials on Thursday began revealing the building blocks of a strategy to restore the Chesapeake Bay, using federal leadership to encourage states to cut pollution and federal muscle, when necessary, to ensure it happens. Among recommendations in draft reports from federal agencies: expanded regulation of large-scale animal farms and municipal stormwater runoff, and requirements that increases in pollution be offset by reductions from other sources. The details, such as how many more animal feeding operations would be regulated, have not been decided, but 'the message here is that there will be, there is a commitment at EPA to increased enforcement and increased oversight of state programs,' EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson said Thursday. The reports will be used to develop a bay restoration strategy, scheduled for release Nov. 9, that was mandated by an executive order issued earlier this year by President Obama. The EPA said it was working with Chesapeake Bay states and the District of Columbia to establish limits for nitrogen, phosphorus and sediments. States would have to develop detailed plans on how to reduce levels of those pollutants from sources such as farms, highways and lawns. The EPA said it would step in if states don't take sufficient action. While large operations such as industrial chicken farms would be regulated, the EPA said it would also expand regulation of municipal stormwater programs to include high-growth areas. Jackson said the goal was to use federal leadership, and 'federal muscle when necessary.' Agriculture is responsible for about half the pollution entering the bay, but Jackson noted there is more turf grass in the bay watershed than corn acreage and the region is much different from when bay restoration efforts began decades ago."
Posted on Monday, September 14, 2009 - 10:50am
Urbanna Board of Zoning Appeals Votes 3-1 to Block Marina RepairsThe Southside Sentinel reported earlier this week that the Urbanna Board of Zoing appeals upheld the decision of town zoning administrator that has prevented Potomac Timber from rebuilding the marina at Yurbanna Yachting Center. The Board of Zoning Appeals' major issue is that the developer has two different site plans, one for the marina and one for the condo, however the two plans overlap on the same property. Urbanna residents should take interest in this developing story as the delays, legal fees and meetings could tie up valuable town resources. It is of particular interest to homeowners near the marina who could see an increase in home value if the project ever gets off the ground and completed. "The Urbanna Board of Zoning Appeals (BZA) upheld a decision by town zoning administrator Lewis Filling on Monday that stopped Potomac Timber from rebuilding the marina at Urbanna Yachting Center. Plans by Potomac Timber to build 14 condominiums on the same 1.5-acre parcel on Urbanna Creek are also on hold, mired in court by a $4 million lawsuit filed by the developer. Since May 26, the BZA has twice granted delays to the marina appeal to give both sides two months to reach a settlement on both the marina appeal and condo lawsuit. No settlement was reached. The marina appeal to the BZA stems from a site plan rejection by Urbanna Town Administrator Lewis Filling that blocked the marina rebuilding. On March 27, Potomac Timber filed a town zoning permit application to remove 82 slips and some boathouses, and to install 5 new docks with 98 slips, replace fuel tanks, and replace 263 linear feet of bulkhead." Posted on Friday, August 7, 2009 - 4:22pm
Sewage plant hearing postponed
"On Monday, July 20, the Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) granted Middlesex County’s request to postpone action on a permit for the proposed Saluda wastewater treatment plant. The State Water Control Board (SWCB) was scheduled to consider the permit application on Thursday, July 23. The county wants time to determine the feasibility of 'land application,' which is applying the treated wastewater to land instead of discharging it into Urbanna Creek." Posted on Tuesday, July 21, 2009 - 3:21am
Urbanna Council Votes for 2-cent Tax Hike
"Urbanna's real estate tax rate will go up 2 cents to 22 cents per $100 of value in the 2009-10 fiscal year, which begins July 1." Continue Reading... Posted on Saturday, June 27, 2009 - 2:01pm
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Posted on Monday, June 15, 2009 - 12:00am
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