Our Town



Welcome to Our Town, where all who love South Haven can have their say.

If you would like to be an author on Our Town weblog please email.

Include your name and a brief explanation of why you would like to be an author.


March 08, 2005

Drama at the Planning Commission

City Council and Board and Commission meetings are where the public life of our community is thrashed out in full view of anyone in the audience or watching the public cable channel. Tedious as they are 90% of the time, it is well worth settling in with a cup of tea or a glass of wine and watching our community create or wreck itself.

The marathon five hour long City Planning Commission meeting on Thursday night was every bit as dramatic as anything you can rent at Movie Gallery.

Last week's meeting consisted of a young builder making his first public petition for a variance. He may have been a little nervous, but acquitted himself well and you could feel the good will and support for him coming from all in the Council chambers.

A couple wanting to develop an unusually configured lot on Park Street made a pitch for three town houses. The Commission listened and encouraged them to consider detached houses. Although the presentation may not have concluded with the support they wanted, the petitioners and the Commission members conducted the discussion in a mutually respectful manner.

Next came a preliminary presentation of the proposed development for Indiana school. This project is massive, imaginative and very expensive. The neighbors of the school have concerns about the impact of increased traffic and the scale of the project given the single-family homes that surround it. The developer offered his sketches - a preferred one and an alternative. He made the case that the school is unlikely to be remodeled as a single-family dwelling. He cited the architectural integrity of his design and suggested that if a multi family project isn't approved the attractive old building will simply slowly die before our eyes. (A sentiment attested to by the softly collapsing old Baptist church at Center and Huron.) The council and the developer agreed that a forum for public comment is needed before more is invested in this project.

Then the finale. The developer of the Sherman Hills project was asked to appear to answer to possible violations of the approved site plan. If you haven't seen this project from the Kal-Haven trail or 72 1/2 street you don't know that every tree, bush and blade of grass was scrapped off this rolling land last fall. During the winter snow and rain and freeze-thaw cycles the topsoil has rushed in a torrent into the river and over the streets that surround the area. Surprisingly (!) there was an environmental crisis that the developers felt required emergency measures to stop erosion. So some retaining walls were built and the communication between the developers and the city became either erratic, contentious or murky depending on who is telling the tale.

The attorney representing the developer strode up to the podium, planted his feet wide, lowered his head like a bull and looked at the Commission through slitted, penetrating eyes and rumbled that he was from Lansing and was here to clear up a few things. The only thing missing was Gary Cooper across the room reluctantly strapping on his six-gun.

During the next hour the Commissioners puzzled through the sequence of events, listened to explanations and defenses - all delivered to them in an unrepentant, defensive and vaguely intimidating tone. The Council and Kathy Staton remained cool and focused. At one point Elaine Herbert modestly reminded the attorney, that - while she wasn't sure what the protocol in Lansing was - when in South Haven he would have a more productive interactions if he could bring himself to be respectful in his comments. Dave Varney got to the heart of the matter when he asked Kathy Staton to give a time line of communications and infractions, James Glas expressed the displeasure of the Commission in a clear and articulate statement and Forrest Austell labored to keep the disputants focused. In the end the stop work order was retained - other than the work necessary to prevent further erosion - until an amended site plan was submitted.

The Planning Commission did a fine job in finding a united voice to oppose an abuse of public trust. As South Haven faces the many pressures of development we can hope that all City Boards and Commissions and the Council will move beyond having thoughtful reactions to problems as demonstrated by last week's commission meeting. We require a new mode of planning development to address the arrival of the many people attracted to South Haven. We need proactive planning that enhances the qualities and characteristics of South Haven. This evolution will require the best thinking listening and action of all of us.

Posted by Julie at March 8, 2005 12:33 PM

Comments

Welcome to Our Town, Julie! And thanks for the recap of the roller coaster night at Planning Commission. As a commissioner myself it's a little wierd commenting on it here at the blog, so I am especially appreciative of your contribution. (I hope you'll feel free to comment when/if we screw up as well!) Planning Commission is "where the action is" and a must-see event for those interested in the process and the future of property use in our beautiful little town.

I am so proud to be on the Planning Commission with such smart and courageous city planners like Jim Glas and Forrest. Kathy Staton, the city planning administrator, is a true professional and does a great deal of the homework for us...then spoon-feeds background, law and suggestions to the Commission without ever stepping into the actual decisions. I am a big fan of hers.

Here's a funny for you: My husband watched the evil attorney on TV. We couldn't hear or see it at the meeting room, but it seems he was standing very, very close to the microphone. As he got more and more agitated and rude, he was breathing deeply through his nose. Seems he sounded exactly like Darth Vader to the TV watching gang. Too funny, totally appropriate! I would love to see a tape. Loved your description of him.

Also wish the SH Tribune would have covered the event.

It was amazing. Thanks for being there until after midnight! ZZZZZZZZZZZZ!

Posted by: Elaine at March 9, 2005 09:10 AM

I can't believe what I just read on this site about the development on 71 1/2 Street (Sherman Hills). It is to bad that two individuals would write such derogatory things about another human being. The city of South Haven has done nothing to support this project even though it will bring dollars into our town. I hope that the developer gets his approval to annex all his property back into the township. May then the "city" people can back off him and his project.

Posted by: Diane at May 10, 2005 02:01 PM

Post a comment




Remember Me?