In light of the tremendous interest The Beacon blog post yesterday about the Chicahauk Property Owners Assn. meeting at 5:30 p.m. today received—and the contact we received from readers saying that property owners have not been informed about it—we contacted CPOA president David Stager this morning and officially confirmed the meeting, which will be held in the Pitts Center.
According to Mr. Stager, the purpose of the meeting is to “gather” questions for a survey to be sent to CPOA members regarding whether to “change or adjust” association covenants. (See yesterday’s Beacon post.)
Mr. Stager said a member of the CPOA Board of Directors is holding the meeting, but he declined to identify who the board member is.
The Beacon has learned from other reliable sources, who prefer to remain anonymous, that the Board members behind the meeting are James Krueger and Maureen McGovern.
The Southern Shores Beacon was founded in April 2018 in order to better inform property owners of news in Southern Shores so that they may knowledgeably participate in community conversations. We believe everyone should have a voice in local decision-making. Our sole purpose in publicizing the CPOA meeting is to inform.
Did you know that guest houses, “ancillary” guest suites, and accessory structures may not be leased or rented separately from the main single-family residence on a lot in Chicahauk?
Or that duplexes and multiple-family houses are “expressly prohibited” in this subdivision of Southern Shores, which is subject to the Town Code as well as its own governing rules?
Or how about that no “existing vegetation or sand dunes shall be disturbed, removed or destroyed during construction” unless the Chicahauk Property Owners Assn. (CPOA) gives “express written consent” for such disturbance/removal/destruction to occur?
We are quoting from provisions of Article III of the Chicahauk covenants, as adopted on June 8, 2010 by the CPOA, that plainly prohibit Airbnb and other room/suite/guest house rentals and clear-cutting of lots, as well as less extensive vegetation changes, in the subdivision.
And yet, we all know that such rentals exist in Chicahauk and that homeowners there clear-cut their lots and otherwise “disturb” vegetation during construction without obtaining permission first from the property owners’ association.
What other mandates is the CPOA Board of Directors ignoring? Is its benign neglect what other property owners want?
Do the CPOA covenants need enforcement or revision and updating?
If you live in Chicahauk, you might wish to attend a CPOA meeting tomorrow at 5:30 p.m. in the Pitts Center to discuss a review of the CPOA covenants and bylaws and contribute your thoughts to answering these questions.
(We received word earlier today from CPOA members that the meeting was being held, but they did not identify a presiding committee. Notice of a meeting does not appear on the CPOA website.)
According to our sources, the CPOA will scrutinize the covenants and bylaws, which were last revised on Dec. 6, 2012, and discuss the drafting of a survey to solicit opinions from the membership about possible changes.
If you participate in a community conversation now, you won’t be surprised later.
BEACH NOURISHMENT ASSESSMENT
We regret that we have not had the time or opportunity to report on the update given by Ken Willson of Coastal Protection Engineering at last Tuesday’s Town Council meeting on the status of the Southern Shores beaches.
According to Mr. Willson, CPE surveyed the beaches at its 23 station profiles in late November 2022, after the October-November beach nourishment project, and in June 2023. He generally gave a positive assessment, saying that, even without the sand volume added by the nourishment, the beaches would have gained volume through natural accretion.
Mr. Willson suggested that the Town might not have to maintain its beach nourishment on a five-year cycle, being able to extend out six or seven years before the next project will have to be done.
We would like to give you data from Mr. Willson’s report to back up this overview and will do so as soon as possible.
PLANNING BOARD/BOA MEETING DEC. 18: A Variance Request and Lot-Width ZTA
The Southern Shores Planning Board will sit as the Board of Adjustment next Monday at 5 p.m. in the Pitts Center to hear a request from the owner of 17 Ninth Ave. for a variance that would allow him to locate a 10-foot-by-16-foot shed in the minimally required side-yard setback, as set forth in Town Code sec. 36-202(d)(4).
A side-yard setback of 15 feet is required in the RS-1 single-family residential district between a building and all structures that are at least 30 inches tall and the side boundary line of an adjacent property. If the edge of property owner Gerald Soucy’s shed is closer than 15 feet to the side-lot line, he has violated the ordinance.
In his variance application, Mr. Soucy writes that the shed is five feet “from the side-yard fence.” But he points out that the shed is more than 30 feet from the neighbors’ pool fence and more than 45 feet from their house.
“These distances are in line with the spirit of the setback ordinance,” he writes, if not the letter of it.
Board of Adjustment hearings on variances are quasi-judicial, not legislative public hearings. Members of the public may give factual testimony under oath—not opinions—only if they could be aggrieved by the Board’s decision on the variance application, which is VA-23-02.
According to instructions by the Town, only “immediate neighbors” whose “property use, enjoyment and value would be adversely impacted by the Board’s decision” can be considered “aggrieved.”
The variance application may be found in the supporting documents appended to the Planning Board meeting notice at:
Also on the Board’s agenda for Monday is consideration of a Zoning Text Amendment, ZTA 23-05, that rewrites, and presumably clarifies, the language of ordinances pertaining to the minimally required lot widths in the Town’s residential zoning districts.
By a vote of 3-2, the Town Council enacted a “stopgap” ordinance on lot width at its June 6 meeting that enabled only those lots newly created by subdivision or recombination that have uniform minimally required widths from side-lot-line to side-lot-line, to be considered conforming. Thus, in the RS-1 single-family dwelling district, a new lot would have to be 100 feet in width throughout. No irregularly shaped lots would be conforming, only rectangular ones.
Mayor Pro Tem Matt Neal and Councilwoman Paula Sherlock objected to the stopgap ordinance, ZTA 23-03, arguing that it mandated too many Town Code amendments and that the “ambiguity” it sought to resolve, according to Mr. Neal, “was where the front setback is.”
The front building setback line was and is used as a measuring stick for lot width.
“Wouldn’t it be simpler,” Mr. Neal asked, “to fix the front setback at one static location?”
We answered “yes” to him in our blog post of 6/13/23 and are not surprised that the new ZTA, 23-05, develops this concept–with one big wrinkle.
In fixing the front building setback line, at which lot width is to be measured, the new ZTA distinguishes between lots that front on a cul de sac from all other lots.
For example, in the RS-1 district, the building setback line may be established up to 80 feet from the front lot line of cul-de-sac lots, whereas the building setback line for all other lots shall be established 25 feet from the front lot line.
We find the language for where the 100-foot width is to be measured on lots that front on cul de sacs to be problematic and expect it to give the Planning Board pause.
Planning Director/Deputy Town Manager Wes Haskett recommends approval of ZTA 23-05 in his staff report. Both Mr. Haskett’s report and the ZTA may be found in the supporting documents, as cited above.
How have the beaches fared since last year’s nourishment project? We’ll find out Tuesday.
Town Council members Matt Neal and Mark Batenic, who were re-elected in the Nov. 7 election, and newcomer Robert Neilson will be sworn into office for their four-year terms, and the Town Council will elect a mayor pro tempore and make Dare County and regional council committee appointments, at its meeting Tuesday, at 5:30 p.m., in the Pitts Center.
The Town Council also will recognize outgoing Councilman Leo Holland, who served eight years in two non-consecutive terms, for his service. Mr. Holland has been Southern Shores’ representative on the Dare County Tourism Board of Directors during his tenure.
In other business, Ken Willson of Coastal Protection Engineering will present the results from the first survey of the Southern Shores beaches since the October-November 2022 beach-nourishment project, and the Council will discuss renovations to the Town-owned flat top at 13 Skyline Road that are needed to convert the historic building back into a residence, which will be used on a temporary basis by newly hired police officers.
The flat top most recently served as headquarters for the Outer Banks Community Foundation, which moved its offices to Manteo.
As of the close of business Friday, Mr. Willson had not filed his draft report of CPE’s beach nourishment monitoring with the Town. If the report is posted before Tuesday’s meeting, we will preview the results.
A list of items deemed necessary by Town staff to renovate the Skyline Road flat top (e.g., carpeting/flooring, roof repair, plumbing, washer/dryer, kitchen supplies, etc.) is included in the meeting packet. These items total $14,890. The staff also prepared a contingency list for furniture that totals $21,150.
Town staff is requesting approval from the Town Council of a 2023-24 budget amendment in the amount of $36,150 to cover $21,150 in flat-top renovations and $15,000 in other costs, including $450 in annual water charges, $1,200 in annual electricity charges, $528 in pest control, and $11,669 in legal fees.
The Town Council’s regular December meeting after a municipal election is always an organizational meeting for the reconstituted governing board, during which the election of the mayor pro tem, who serves as mayor when the mayor is absent or incapacitated physically or mentally, is the paramount task. Mr. Neal has served as mayor pro tem during the past two years.
The Council also will appoint or nominate people to serve on the Dare County Gov-Ed Access Channel Committee, the Albemarle Rural Planning Organization, and the Dare County Tourism Board and approve its 2024 meeting schedule.
The Council’s first meeting in 2024 is scheduled Jan. 9 at 5:30 p.m.
NEW POLICE RECRUIT POSITION
At its Nov. 14 meeting, the Town Council unanimously approved Police Chief David Kole’s request to create a “Recruit” position in his department, enabling him to hire a full-time employee whom the Town would pay to attend and successfully complete the 16-week N.C. Basic Law Enforcement Training Academy (BLET) offered at the College of the Albemarle.
Chief Kole estimated the cost of the BLET training at $2800 to $3000.
According to the Police Chief, the Recruit would initially receive a salary “25 percent below the base starting pay for a fully qualified police office.” Upon meeting all of the qualifications for a police officer, the Recruit would be sworn into office, promoted to the appropriate pay grade, and serve on a probationary basis for one year.
According to a draft contract between the Recruit and the Town, a copy of which was included in the Nov. 14 meeting packet, the Town would “recoup” some of its financial investment in the Recruit in the event he or she does not fulfill his/her obligations—and other specific conditions are met—for up to three years from the date of hiring.
This unprecedented hiring method is an attempt by Chief Kole to fill one of three officer vacancies he has had for the past 2 ½ years with someone he believes would fit in with his department and the community, he told the Town Council.
“I could have filled these [three] slots six months ago,” he said at the meeting last month, “but we don’t want just anybody.”
When asked by Mayor Elizabeth Morey what other Outer Banks municipalities might have done or be doing to fill police vacancies, which the Police Chief has said exist largely because of the lack of affordable housing available, he replied that the Dare County Sheriff’s Department had recruited trainees, but he did not comment on nearby towns’ efforts.
A search of the Duck, Kitty Hawk, Kill Devil Hills, Nags Head, and Manteo websites reveals that Kitty Hawk, Kill Devil Hills, and Nags Head each have one vacancy for a police officer, and Manteo is seeking a police chief. Duck has no openings.
Chief Kole told the Town Council that he has identified a qualified candidate who “was born and raised in Currituck County” and has ridden along with other officers on their patrols. If hired, the candidate would begin his police training in January.
In light of the lengthy vacancy time of the three police officer positions, it seems logical for the Town Council to ask whether the Town actually needs to hire more officers. The Police Department seems to have operated well without the additional personnel.
The Town Council did not discuss a timetable for renovation and occupancy of the Skyline Road flat top or settle upon a lease term and monthly rent for the residence.
New Duck Road Sidewalk and Friday Night Power Outage: ALSO LAST MONTH, Town Manager Cliff Ogburn advised that the new east-side Duck Road (N.C. Hwy. 12) sidewalk will be finished by the end of March 2024 and confirmed that the three-hour power outage on Friday, Nov. 3, was caused by fiber cable installer Ripple knocking out three major power lines. More than 2200 houses were in the dark, Mr. Ogburn said.
The chief reason cited by The Planning Board for its “rejection”—which is actually a recommendation to the decision-making Town Council to deny approval of SUP 23-01—is the deplorable state and operation of the on-site wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) owned by the Gupta family.
The WWTP that would serve the proposed Ginguite, LLC, development at 6195 N. Croatan Hwy. has been serving the residences at Southern Shores Landing (SSL). It is currently in noncompliance with utility regulations and has been cited for numerous violations.
Planning Board Member Ed Lawler painstakingly went through documentation that he had obtained from online research into the websites of the N.C. Dept. of Environmental Quality and the N.C. Utilities Commission to show the incredible dysfunctionality of the WWTP, which has not worked as it should and has been operated on an emergency basis since 2009.
“There is no treatment occurring there,” said Mr. Lawler, who noted that “the water never gets to the area where it should go,” going instead into the infiltration pond.
“The level of equipment that’s not operational is phenomenal,” he said.
Mr. Lawler’s research resulted in the documentation that the Town posted last week and we highlighted in our 11/18/23 blog. We were unaware that these documents came from a search by the Planning Board because the source was not identified by the Town.
In a letter to the Town Attorney in which she responds to questions about the SUP from the Planning Board, SAGA attorney Jamie S. Schwedler repeatedly states that the operation of the WWTP is not an appropriate subject for a Special Use Permit request. (See The Beacon, 11/18/23.)
Mr. Ward read aloud Ms. Schwedler’s letter and noted that her objections to the attention paid by the Board to the WWTP were a matter for the Town’s lawyers to address. Although the WWTP is owned by GWWTP, LLC, a different SAGA subsidiary than SUP applicant Ginguite, LLC, Mr. Ward treated them as one in the same, referring to the plant owner as the “Gupta-managed LLC.”
“The Gupta-managed LLC has operated the wastewater treatment plant in a manner that is detrimental to the health, safety, and welfare” of the community, he concluded.
The disastrous state of the WWTP, which poses water-quality and environmental hazards, “trumps everything,” he said, in the Planning Board’s decision-making.
(See The Beacon, 11/18/23, for more details about the WWTP.)
Among the other reasons cited by the Board for denying approval was its insistence that Ginguite, LLC, maintain a 50-foot setback from the eastern line of its property adjacent to Southern Shores Landing.
Although Ginguite expanded its original 15-foot setbacks between its property and SSL to setbacks that varied along the boundary from 20 feet to 34 feet, the developer said it could not accommodate wider setbacks.
At the first Board hearing of the SUP in September, SAGA CEO and Ginguite, LLC, principal Sumit Gupta said 50-foot setbacks caused him “heartburn.” He attended tonight’s meeting, but did not speak and was not permitted to comment after the Board’s decision, had he chosen to.
Both Planning Board members Tony DiBernardo and Robert McClendon cited the Town Land Use Plan as authority for their votes. Mr. McClendon said that the Ginguite project “is not compatible with the area in which it is located,” a provision that is contained within the LUP Vision Statement, but is rarely invoked.
Chairperson Ward referred to the Town Code extensively to buttress the Planning Board’s decision with legal authority, citing for the first time a section dedicated to the Town’s management of wastewater systems and the oversight role that the Planning Board plays. (See Sec. 32, et seq.; in particular, Sec. 32-4.)
At its meeting last month, Katie Morgan of Colington, who used derogatory words to describe SAGA and its development practices, passionately told the Planning Board that if it denied approval to SAGA’s permit, “You all would be heroes on the beach.”
The Ginguite Woods Wastewater Treatment Plant is located on N. Croatan Hwy. to the right of Landing Trail (east) above and consists of two parcels, one of which has a large pond on it. (Photo courtesy of Dare County GIS.)
Ginguite, LLC, last week submitted new materials with the Town of Southern Shores regarding its proposed mixed-use development at 6195 N. Croatan Hwy., which include a letter from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers verifying wetlands on the property and a revised site plan with wider side-yard setbacks to Southern Shores Landing properties, and the Town has placed online documentation of the ownership and troubled operation of the wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) that would serve Ginguite’s luxury condominium/office/retail, restaurant complex.
Ginguite’s filings are in response to wide-ranging questions by the Planning Board at its Oct. 16 meeting, the second one the Board has held to review its application for a Special Use Permit (SUP). (Update: As we learned at the Monday Planning Board meeting, the extensive WWTP documents were obtained by Planning Board Member Ed Lawler during online research.)
The Planning Board will meet Monday at 5 p.m. in the Pitts Center for its third meeting about Ginguite’s application, known as SUP 23-01.
The Board’s hearings are preliminary to making a recommendation to the Town Council to either disapprove the SUP application or approve it with conditions, which Ginguite would have to fulfill before it may apply for and receive a Building Permit.
As Planning Board Chairman Andy Ward observed upon opening last month’s meeting, Ginguite would not need a special permit if it were to develop its commercially zoned property as exclusively commercial or (RS-8 multifamily) residential–land uses that are permitted as of right under the Town Code. Mixed-use developments, however, require an SUP. (See Town Code sec. 36-207(c)).
The Town Council will hold a quasi-judicial hearing on the merits of SUP 23-01 before it makes its decision on permit approval. The Council is not bound by the volunteer Planning Board’s recommendation or the conditions it proposes, but it usually gives deference to the Board.
26 QUESTIONS
In its materials, Ginguite, LLC, which is a subsidiary of SAGA Realty & Construction, submits answers to 26 questions that were raised by the Planning Board during its three-and-a-half-hour October meeting. SAGA attorney Jamie S. Schwedler, a Raleigh-based partner with the regional law firm of Parker Poe, provides the responses.
Attorney Ashley Honeycutt Terrazas, an associate at Parker Poe, represented Ginguite at the Oct. 16 meeting, along with Michael Strader, director of engineering at Quible & Associates of Kitty Hawk who is charge of the Ginguite project.
In her responses—to such issues as an independent traffic study, the operation and water quality at the WWTP, landscaping and lighting at the proposed project, and the use of Landing Trail, a road off of U.S. Hwy. 158 into the Southern Shores Landing that Ginguite, LLC owns—Ms. Schwedler clearly distinguishes those conditions that she deems appropriate for a Special Use Permit and those that she does not.
For example, while Ginguite has agreed to a traffic impact analysis (TIA) being done by the N.C. Dept. of Transportation before the Building Permit stage, Ms. Schwedler states that the Planning Board cannot require the TIA to be done before it makes its recommendation on the SUP, as proposed by Planning Board Alternate Michael Zehner, who asked for “a peer review of an independent [traffic] study,” before he casts his vote.
Ms. Schwedler further notes that NCDOT is an independent State agency. (Question One on “Responses to TOSS Planning Board Questions Received 11/1/23.)
(See https://www.southernshores-nc.gov/planning/page/planning-board-november-20-2023 for all new supporting documents, which are divided into two categories: 1. SUP 23-01 Documents and 2) SUP 23-01 Waste Water Treatment Plant documents. Ms. Schwedler’s responses are included in the first documents link.
(If you cannot access the material through this link, simply click on the Planning Board meeting notice under “Public Notices” on the TOSS website home page at https://www.southernshores-nc.gov/.)
She further states that Ginguite:
“is not required” by Town ordinance to submit elevation drawings of its proposed buildings from the rear (north) of the site, as the Board requested, nor must it show building-mounted lights and wall signage until the Building Permit stage (Questions 14, 18, 21);
does not have to “submit a construction management plan for construction phases and a timeline” of the SAGA project, as the Board requested, because “That is not required for a site plan or a special use permit.” (Question 22);
“has no intention of blocking Landing Trail [which Ginguite, LLC has allowed Southern Shores Landing residents and others to use],” but that “whether or not [SSL residents] have an access easement is irrelevant” to its SUP application (Question 25); and
has not applied for a wastewater treatment plant and, therefore, all of the Planning Board’s questions about the existing WWTP, which is owned by GWWTP, LLC, another SAGA subsidiary, are not relevant to the SUP application (Questions 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9).
Frustration clearly creeps into Ms. Schwedler’s response letter, as it did in Ms. Terrazas’s meeting comments last month.
“We look forward to wrapping up the discussion on SUP 23-01 [on Nov. 20] and receiving a recommendation” on the SUP and site plan, Ms. Schwedler concludes, noting “we have made extensive efforts to answer the Planning Board’s questions ….”
Similarly, when asked by Board Member Robert McClendon, whom Chairperson Ward supported, to submit renderings of the site buildings that show what they “will look like on that land,” not just flat drawings, Ms. Terrazas replied in a strained voice: “We’ve provided the typical renderings and elevations at this point. . . . We feel like we have [provided] all of the information that’s normally submitted at this time. We have been through everything. We need the Board to make a recommendation.”
Mr. McClendon told her that actual renderings of the two planned buildings, in context and perspective, are “absolutely essential for an approval recommendation from me.”
“The citizens are concerned about how much view is being blocked from the highway,” he observed to applause from the audience.
Ms. Terrazas appeared resigned to accept whatever recommendation the Board makes, pro or con, in order to go forward to the Town Council.
In answering questions about the WWTP, which has a history of regulatory noncompliance, Ms. Schwedler repeatedly responds: “SUP 23-01 is not an application for a WWTP. GWWTP, while controlled by the Applicant, is not the applicant for this case, and the TOSS is not reviewing any permits or applications for the properties upon which the WWTP sits. The WWTP planned to serve the subject development is regulated by the [N.C. Dept. of Environmental Quality] and NCDEQ is responsible for determining whether the WWTP can serve the development. It will not issue the necessary permits otherwise.”
Ms. Terrazas also made this point repeatedly at the October meeting: Ginguite, LLC, must procure NCDEQ’s approval of the WWTP before it submits its Building Permit application. That is a condition of the SUP. (We discuss the WWTP below.)
Indeed, the developer must obtain a number of governmental permits before it can proceed to the next stage of the construction process. They are enumerated in Deputy Town Manager/Planning Director Wes Haskett’s Sept. 18 Staff Report on SUP 23-01.
Dominion Energy, with whom SAGA “has been in dialogues . . . from the outset,” Mr. Strader said Oct. 16, “will reserve its approval,” until after the Town has finished its review. The Planning Board has inquired about projected parking spaces being in a 70-foot Dominion power easement.
While the Planning Board’s probing questions have elicited a lot of information, as well as the support and enthusiasm of its community audiences, we agree that the time for a wrap-up has arrived. The Board’s earnest, thorough questioning is increasingly marked by redundancy and irrelevancy. Does the Board really need to know the details of Ginguite’s landscaping design, for example, before it rules on the Special Use Permit? (The ordinance pertaining to mixed-use group development addresses the issue of vegetative buffers. Sec. 36-207(c)(11).)
SAGA is many months removed from breaking ground at 6195 N. Croatan Hwy., if indeed, it receives the permits it needs to do so. The Planning Board may be “the first line of defense” in the SUP process, as Mr. Ward has noted, but its weapon should not be overkill.
WETLANDS, BUFFERS
In an Oct. 27 email submitted by Ginguite to the Town, Shane F. Staples, a Regulatory Specialist with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Wilmington district, verifies the “delineation” of aquatic resources on Ginguite’s property: A half-acre area north of the pond that abuts property owned by All Saints’ Episcopal Church is delineated as wetlands, he instructs, while the creek basin and the remainder of the Ginguite site are non-wetlands, as shown on aerial imagery attached to the email text.
This delineation is not what Mr. Staples calls a “jurisdictional determination,” but it “may be relied upon for use in the permit evaluation process, including compensatory mitigation.”
At the Oct. 16 meeting, Mr. McClendon said a wetlands delineation would be sufficient at this stage. SAGA has not proposed construction on the wetlands area.
In public comments last month, Stephen Hotchkiss, who identified himself as the senior elected layperson at All Saints’, said that, after the Planning Board’s September meeting, church representatives contacted and met with SAGA representatives, walked the church’s property, and had “productive” discussions about the church’s concerns, chief among them “the privacy of our sacred grounds outdoors.”
Mr. Hotchkiss said he was confident that the parties would “make progress” to “meet our needs,” and encouraged residents of Southern Shores Landing to contact SAGA for “good neighbor” talks, as well.
Ginguite has revised its original site plan to incorporate a minimum 20-foot buffer (an increase of five feet) “with more natural existing vegetation and a retaining wall on the eastern property line,” next to the Landing; to shift its refuse area farther away from the Landing; and to preserve an existing soil pathway on the northeast corner of its property that Landing residents and churchgoers routinely use.
It also has eliminated a proposed marina, a land use that Mr. Haskett ruled in an interpretation is not allowed in the Town’s commercial district.
Although Mr. Haskett suggested that the Planning Board condition its recommended approval of the SUP on Ginguite’s maintenance of a 50-foot setback from its eastern property line adjacent to the Landing, Ginguite has consistently contested this condition, finding it contrary to Town Code requirements.
The portion of SSL property that abuts Ginguite’s property is zoned commercial, and, as such, is entitled under the Code to only a 15-foot side setback from structures that SAGA might build. If it were in a residential district, like the church is, a 50-foot side setback would be mandated.
At the October meeting, Mr. Strader showed a graphic illustrating revised buffers between Ginguite and SSL that vary from 20 to 34 feet. Both he and Ms. Terrazas referred to the increased widths as “concesssions” by SAGA.
Mr. Ward intimated that the Board is inclined to accept Mr. Haskett’s 50-foot setback condition, which he justified as appropriate to mitigate the impact of Ginguite’s development on the Landing, transportation in and out of the community, stormwater runoff, sewage treatment, and noise, among other things.
Both Ms. Terrazas and Mr. Strader said Ginguite’s 20- to 34-foot setback is a “good compromise” and it cannot offer more.
WASTEWATER TREATMENT PLANT
After the Planning Board’s October meeting, the wastewater treatment plant that SAGA owns, but hasn’t operated properly, earning fines imposed by the NCDEQ for multiple violations, was all the buzz. That made the local news.
We found the facts about the WWTP unclear, however, and continue to find them so, despite the new documents on the Town website.
According to these materials, the N.C. Environmental Management Commission issued a permit on Oct. 3, 2018 to GWWTP, LLC, to operate a 32,500-gallon-per-day reclaimed water generation system, conjunctive reclaimed water utilization, and low-rate infiltration system at the plant, until Nov. 30, 2023—which is the end of this month.
GWWTP stands for Ginguite Woods Wastewater Treatment Plant. The plant is located to the east of the Ginguite property at 0 N. Croatan Hwy. on two parcels: One has equipment on it, the other has a pond, which Planning Board Member Ed Lawler said is rife with algae.
Since Nov. 20, 2009, an emergency operator appointed by the N.C. Utilities Commission (NCUC) has run the Ginguite Woods subdivision sewer utility system. The Commission took this action to protect against the “imminent danger” of the loss of the utility service, upon which SSL residents depend.
That order is still in effect.
During its five-year permit period, GWWTP, LLC, has been cited for numerous violations, including exceeding daily maximums of fecal coliform bacteria, MFC broth, and turbidity, and exceeding nitrogen ammonia limits, as measured in plant water samples. As the owner of GWWTP, LLC, Prem Gupta, a SAGA partner and officer who, we believe, is Sumit Gupta’s father, received notices of these violations and unpaid civil penalties imposed by NCDEQ.
Sumit Gupta, who is the Chief Executive Officer of SAGA and a principal in Ginguite, LLC, did not attend the Oct. 16 meeting.
At the time of the 2009 emergency order, Ginguite Woods Water Reclamation Assn., which was owned by Neil Blenkin, owned the wastewater service franchise and had done so since 2003. For reasons unknown, GWWRA did not properly transfer control of the wastewater plant to Prem Gupta’s GWWTP.
According to a July 25, 2023 letter sent to the NCUC chief clerk by an N.C. Public Staff Utilities Commission attorney, Ginguite Woods Water Reclamation Assn. sought in February of this year to transfer its Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity to provide sewer utility service to GWWTP. The Public Staff found that the sewer system had been abandoned by both the GWWRA and the Commission-appointed emergency operator and that the land on which the system is located had been sold “multiple times without Commission approval.”
Although GWWTP stepped in and is currently operating the system to maintain service, the Public Staff recommended that the NCUC find the transfer application incomplete. Because of the number of irregularities, it issued what is called a deficiency letter.
Mr. Strader has said that Atlantic OBX is serving now as the contract operator of the wastewater treatment plant, but it is clear from the new documentation that, as GWWTP approaches the expiration date of its operating permit, the plant is out of compliance in many respects.
Although Ginguite, LLC, is not the legal entity that owns the wastewater treatment plant, its high-end mixed-use development will be dependent on its service.
“By law,” Ms. Terrazas said, “we will be required to take care of this” before the Town of Southern Shores will issue a Building Permit.
As reported on 10/17/23, the Planning Board took no action last month on SUP 23-01.
The Southern Shores Town Council will meet Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. in the Pitts Center for its regular monthly meeting. This will be Town Councilman Leo Holland’s last full regular meeting before stepping down.
The swearing-in ceremony for the three election victors—new Town Council member Robert E. Neilson and incumbents Matt Neal and Mark Batenic—will take place at the Town Council’s December meeting. (See The Beacon, 11/7/23, for an election report.)
The most significant item on the Council’s agenda is the authorization of a new position in the Police Department known as “Police Recruit.”
As outlined in the packet materials, including a proposed contract between the Town and the Police Recruit, the Recruit would be a full-time employee whom the Town pays, at a salary “25 percent below the base starting pay for a fully qualified police office,” to attend and successfully complete the N.C. Basic Law Enforcement Training Academy (BLET) offered at the College of the Albemarle.
Upon meeting all of the qualifications for a police officer, the Recruit would be sworn into office, promoted to the appropriate pay grade, and serve on a probationary basis for one year.
Police Chief David Kole has requested the creation of this position because he has been unable to fill three longtime officer vacancies in his department. The Recruit would fill one of these vacancies.
Chief Kole writes in a memorandum to the Town Council that he contacted “Town Attorney John Leidy for his assistance in helping me develop a new policy, contract and a new classification position ‘Recruit’ including a new pay grade.” He states his goal as being to enroll the Recruit in the BLET in January.
We refer you to the meeting packet for more details about this proposed position and the respective contractual obligations between the Recruit and the Town.
PLANNING BOARD CONTINUES REVIEW OF SAGA PERMIT NOV. 20
We still aspire to post another blog about the Planning Board’s Oct. 16 meeting review of Ginguite, LLC/SAGA’s request for a Special Use Permit (SUP) for its proposed condo/retail/office development at 6195 N. Croatan Hwy. before the Board meets again. Our posting may not be as lengthy as we had originally envisioned, but we expect to publish by next weekend. (See The Beacon, 10/17/23.)
The Planning Board will continue its review of SUP 23-01 on Nov. 20 at 5 p.m. in the Pitts Center.
Challenger Robert E. Neilson joined incumbents Matt Neal and Mark Batenic in victory in today’s Town Council election, according to unofficial results posted by the N.C. State Board of Elections.
The NCSBE reported the following vote totals, with 100 percent of the vote in:
We do not yet know how many registered voters in Southern Shores cast ballots and what percentage of the electorate that number constituted.
ELSEWHERE IN DARE COUNTY . . . Incumbent mayors in Kill Devil Hills and Manteo lost, and challenger Kevin Lingard was the top vote getter in Duck, where all five seats on the Town Council were being contested.
A Friend in Duck? Mr. Lingard spoke at the League of Women Voters of Dare County’s candidates forum in Duck about cooperating with Southern Shores to improve the northbound summertime traffic flow on weekends. He even suggested controlling the pedestrian crosswalks in downtown Duck with volunteer or police monitors to limit traffic interruptions.
For a full report of the election results in Dare County, see The Outer Banks Voice.
Sample ballot provided by Dare County Board of Elections, photographed by The Beacon.
The Southern Shores election for three Town Council members will be held tomorrow at the Kern C. Pitts Center, behind Town Hall, from 6:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.
For the first time in North Carolina, all registered voters will be required to show an acceptable photo ID, examples of which are provided below. Voters who arrive at the polls without an acceptable photo ID may still vote with a provisional ballot, as we explain.
The four candidates vying for three four-year positions on the Town Council are incumbents Matt Neal and Mark Batenic and challengers Robert E. Neilson and Michael Guarracino.
The Town pays each Town Council member an annual stipend of $3600. The mayor receives $4200.
The Beacon hasbeen quiet about the Town Council election because the candidates have been quiet. We cannot recall in recent memory a more low-key election for the most important offices in town than this election for three Council members, who represent a majority of the board.
In light of the candidates’ election strategy, we have decided to let them introduce themselves to you, without comment from us.
You may access the candidates’ responses to questions posed by the League of Women Voters at https://www.vote411.org/ballot. Simply enter your address, then click on “Show My Races.”
You may vote for three of the four candidates on the ballot. No write-in candidates have been authorized.
Unofficial election results will be available on the N.C. State Board of Elections website the night of the election. Go to https://er.ncsbe.gov for results.
PLEASE NOTE: Election Day is not a federal or State of North Carolina holiday.
PHOTO IDS REQUIRED
All of the following documents are acceptable photo IDs, provided they are unexpired or expired for one year or less:
N.C. driver’s license
U.S. passport book/U.S. passport card
State ID from the N.C. Dept. of Motor Vehicles (“non-operator ID”)
N.C. voter photo ID card, issued by a county board of elections (free)
College/university student ID approved by the N.C. State Board of Elections
State/local government employee ID approved by the N.C. State Board of Elections
Driver’s license/non-driver ID from another state, D.C., or U.S. territory, provided the voter registered in N.C. within 90 days of the election
Any of the following are acceptable photo IDs, regardless of whether the ID contains an expiration or issuance date:
Military or veteran ID card issued by the U.S. government
Tribal enrollment card issued by a State or federally recognized tribe
ID card issued by a U.S. government agency or the State of N.C. for a public assistance program
To see the complete list of acceptable photo IDs and details on how to request State Board of Elections approval for student and employee IDs, see ncsbe.gov/voter-ID.
You may obtain a free photo ID from the Dare County Board of Elections, which is located at 954 Marshall Collins Drive in the Dare County Administrative Offices complex in Manteo and open from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. M-F; phone: (252) 475-5631,
PLEASE NOTE: Voters age 65 and older may use an expired photo ID if it was unexpired on their 65th birthday.
Registered voters who arrive at the polls without an acceptable photo ID may vote with a provisional ballot if they:
1) complete a Photo ID Exception Form, which asks them to choose from among a number of “reasonable impediments”* that prevent them from showing an ID; OR
2) bring an acceptable photo ID to the Dare County Board of Elections office in Manteo by 5 p.m. on Nov. 16.
All provisional ballots submitted with properly completed ID exception forms must be counted.
*Reasonable impediments listed on the ID Exception Form include:
Lack of transportation
Disability or illness
Lack of birth certificate or other documents needed to obtain ID
Work or school schedule
Family responsibilities
Photo ID lost, stolen, or misplaced
Photo ID pending; have applied for it, but have not received it yet
Religious objection to being photographed
Victim of a natural disaster within 100 days before Election Day that resulted in a disaster declaration by the President of the United State of the Governor of North Carolina.
There is no way to predict delays on Election Day related to implementation/management of the photo ID requirement. Please let us know if you run into any snags at the polls because of the new procedure. You may email us at ssbeaconeditor@gmail.com.
The Town Planning Board adjourned last night after a 3 ½-hour meeting without taking any action on the special use permit (SUP) application submitted by Ginguite, LLC/SAGA for its proposed creekfront condo-retail-office-restaurant development at 6195 N. Croatan Hwy.
The Board will continue its review of Ginguite’s SUP 23-01 at its Nov. 20 meeting. In the interim, the Town will prepare a list of further information items identified during the meeting that the Board needs in order to make a recommendation to the Town Council and give it to SAGA’s representatives to fulfill. The Board may recommend approval of the SUP, with conditions, or denial of the SUP.
Among the many concerns addressed by the Board yesterday were the functionality and capacity of the wastewater treatment plant that would serve the development; the impact that the development would have on traffic in the area; the location and any adverse effects on wetlands on the property; the building setback and vegetative buffer between the east boundary of Ginguite’s property and the Southern Shores Landing community; and the appearance of the development, once constructed.
Board Alternate Michael Zehner drew enthusiastic applause from residents in the audience when he said that the Planning Board should not take any action until a traffic impact study is done and its results are reviewed by an independent expert. The conduct of a traffic study is one of the conditions of the permit’s approval.
Calling the Board “the first line of defense in a process,” Chairperson Andy Ward observed approvingly at the end of the meeting discussion that “We’re moving the process forward.”
He declined to schedule a special meeting to resume the Board’s review before Nov. 20.
(Please Note: We are in transit today and tomorrow and do not know yet when we will be able to expound upon our report. We will do our best to provide further details about the Board meeting before the next meeting. You may view a videotape of the meeting through the Town of Southern Shores You Tube website. Thank you.)
The Town Planning Board will continue its review of Ginguite, LLC’s special use permit application for its proposed condo-retail-office-restaurant development at 6195 N. Croatan Hwy. on Monday at 5 p.m. in the Pitts Center.
Ginguite, LLC, is a subsidiary of SAGA Realty & Construction. Its application, SUP 23-01, is the first invocation of the Town’s ordinance authorizing “mixed-use” group developments of residential and commercial buildings as a conditional or special use in the commercial district. New Town Code sec. 36-207(c)(11) was passed unanimously by the Town Council in June 2022 with the SAGA project in mind.
For previous articles about SAGA’s proposed creekfront development, which has aroused considerable public opposition, see The Beacon, 9/19/23 and 9/29/23.
The Planning Board questioned Ginguite representatives about SUP 23-01 at its Sept. 18 meeting, but adjourned without taking any action. Appearing on behalf of the applicant were Sumit Gupta, Co-Founder, Partner, and Chief Executive Officer of SAGA and engineer Michael Strader of Quible & Associates.
Ginguite, LLC, is proposing to build two three-story wood framed buildings, 200 parking spaces, a marina, and associated infrastructure on what it represents is about 4.55 acres of a 6.96-acre property. The Town has already advised the applicant that marinas, both commercial and recreational, are not permitted in the commercial district.
Unfortunately, we are unable to attend Monday’s Board meeting in person, but we will live-stream it and report on its outcome as soon as we can.
JUST A REMINDER . . . Early voting for the Nov. 7 municipal election starts Thurs., Oct. 19, and runs through Sat., Nov. 4. See https://www.darenc.gov/departments/elections/voting for details. Four candidates are vying for three seats on the Southern Shores Town Council. There are no other races for public office on the ballot.