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Here's what the Crestview City Council will meet about Dec. 14

CRESTVIEW — The City Council will meet 6 p.m. Dec. 14 for a workshop at city hall, 198 Wilson St., N.

Here is the meeting's agenda.

1. Call to Order

2. Invocation, Chaplain Edwin Stallworth Pledge of Allegiance

3. Open Policy making and legislative session

4. Special Presentations

Joseph Lambert – 10 Year Service Award – Fire Department (31 Dec 2005 – 31 Dec 2015)

5. Approval of Minutes

Approval of the minutes from the November 9, 2015 Workshop, the November 9, 2015 Council meeting and the November 30, 2015 council meeting.

6. Public Hearings:

a. Ordinance 1596 – Traffic Impact Fee Waiver – second reading.

7. Public Opportunity on Council propositions

8. Consent Agenda

a. Approval of invoice from Mr. Ben Holley – $3500

b. Approval of invoice from Ard, Shirley and Rudolph – $367.50

c. Approval of Plat for Camille Cove Subdivision – Growth Mgt – Paul Cassady

9. Resolutions

10. Committee Reports

a. Quarterly Report from EDC – Nathan Sparks.

11. Scheduled Presentations from the Public

a. Presentation of architectural renderings for the new Courthouse.

b. Code Enforcement questions – Craig Shaw

12. Project Reports and Comments from Mayor and Council

13. Staff Reports and Recommendations

a. Acceptance of Bid for Website design– City Clerk

b. Acceptance of Bid for Auditing Services – City Clerk

c. Discussion/approval of MOU with County for PJ Adams Dispatch Center- City clerk.

d. Approval of Bid for Gil Ava Project – Public Services

e. Request for Workshop and CRA Meetings — Growth Management

f. Discussion of Interlocal Agreement with County for Courthouse construction.

g. Board vacancies and candidates – Admin Assistant

14. Comments from the Audience

15. Adjournment

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Here's what the Crestview City Council will meet about Dec. 14

Here's the Crestview City Council's next workshop agenda

CRESTVIEW — The City Council will meet 5:15 p.m. Dec. 14 for a workshop at city hall, 198 Wilson St., N.

Here is the meeting's agenda.

1. Call to Order

2. Pledge of Allegiance

3. Public Opportunity on Workshop agenda

4. Items for Discussion

a. Discussion of MOU with County for use of PJ Adams Dispatch Center

b. Discussion of Interlocal Agreement with County for Courthouse construction.

c. Discussion of Traffic Impact Fees in reference to Ordinance 1596 – Traffic Impact Fee Wavier ( If time allows; If not, will be discussed in regular meeting.)

5. Comments from the Audience

6. Adjournment

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Here's the Crestview City Council's next workshop agenda

Amtrak may restore Gulf Coast service with Crestview stop

The Southern Rail Commission hopes that Gulf Coast passenger rail service, served by Amtrak trains such as this one, will return within three to five years. Crestview might be a stop on the line.

CRESTVIEW — The Southern Rail Commission may expand membership eastward as Amtrak considers restoring Gulf Coast passenger rail service between New Orleans and Jacksonville.

Crestview Mayor David Cadle said commission members — currently representing Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana — recently briefed DeFuniak Springs Mayor Bob Campbell, a Destin City Council representative and him following the SRC’s Dec. 4 meeting in Mobile.

“The restoration of Gulf Coast rail service depends on what Congress does with Amtrak’s budgeting,” Cadle said.

Commission members were encouraged by the U.S. Senate’s Dec. 3 passage of a $325 million transportation bill, including $500,000 to study restoring passenger rail service to the Gulf Coast, according to AL.com. The potential for federal rail service funding marks a turnaround from the government’s previous stance, which demanded affected states pay for passenger rail service, the website stated.

Before Hurricane Katrina, Amtrak’s “Sunset Limited” passed through Crestview and neighboring communities including DeFuniak Springs and Pensacola. However, Cadle said, the train’s inconvenient Crestview stop in the early morning hours, coupled with a poor on-time record, deterred ridership.

The proposed service, if approved, likely would follow the “Sunset Limited’s” New Orleans-to-Jacksonville route. That train had stops including Gulfport, Mississippi; Mobile; Pensacola; and Tallahassee.

SRC Chairman Greg White said restoring Gulf Coast rail service in three to five years is “realistic," according to a report by WBRC-TV in Birmingham. “Amtrak specifically has established a series of meetings across the Gulf Coast with stake holders that they hope to bring to the table,” White said.

Meeting participants include leaders of communities, such as Crestview, where the new service could stop, and railroads such as CSX Transportation, which would provide some of the rail infrastructure.

If passenger rail service does return, it would work well with local plans to promote the downtown area by renaming a portion of Industrial Drive as Crestview Junction.

“The CRA (Community Redevelopment Agency) has plans to build a new depot similar to Crestview’s original station for its Crestview Junction initiative,” Cadle said. “Maybe one day that new depot can be used for the real thing.”

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Amtrak may restore Gulf Coast service with Crestview stop

Crestview officials: Despite rumors, development is rising

This rolling hill between State Road 85 and the Comfort Inn in Crestview could be the site of several new chain restaurants. City officials say they are actively facilitating the potential development.

CRESTVIEW — Browsing social media comments, a newcomer might think city officials are thwarting business growth in the Hub City, possibly in cahoots with a rumored "good ol' boy" network.

Such comments are commonplace on the News Bulletin's Facebook fan page and website. One often-repeated rumor is that Crestview officials deliberately stunt growth so more tax dollars can flow to Destin and other south county communities.

But that's not the case, according to growth Management Director Teresa Gaillard. She says her department has seen a steady rise in projects requesting development orders, with seven substantial active projects in development phase.

"Oh yes, we've been busy," Gaillard said. "More development is coming to Crestview."

<<Click "READ MORE" at left to see seven projects in the works

And that, Mayor David Cadle said, could even include some long-hoped-for chain restaurants.

Still, there's the question, and consideration, of traffic impact fees: Do they hurt, help or have no bearing on local development?

The City Council will hold a Dec. 14 public workshop to discuss traffic impact fees; by law, it must decide before the year's end if the current fee waiver, in place since 2013, will continue.

120-DAY WAIVER EXTENSION

The City Council on Nov. 30 unanimously approved, on first reading, an ordinance to continue waiving traffic impact fees for the first four months of 2016 while consultants perform a traffic study that would be required if the waiver continues.

The study should be completed before April, Gaillard says. That would allow a month for city leaders to accept the study and debate whether fees should be waived or reinstated.

Public Works Director Wayne Steele says he knows what he would do.

"I would collect the fees," he said. "Maybe I'd reduce them. That study is only there to protect ourselves in case we get sued by a developer who says we're not using the funds for the benefit of what they were collected for."

Steele says the money — which must be spent to facilitate traffic flow near the affected development — has been well spent.

"Most of this money has to be spent in the (State Road) 85 and (U.S. Highway) 90 corridor, so you're taking traffic counts off the highway," he said.

Before the fee was waived in 2013, the city collected $646,000 in traffic fees, some of which is going toward the Crestview Corners connector road, which will draw traffic off S.R. 85 on the busy stretch between Hospital Drive and Redstone Avenue East.

LOST IMPACT FEES

Gaillard calculates that between January 2013 — when the fees were waived — and the end of October 2015, the city lost $241,119 in commercial development impact fees, and $182,457 in residential development fees.

"For most (developers), impact fees is something they don't even consider," Council President Shannon Hayes said. "Most of the time, when businesses come here, they don't ask, 'What's your impact fees?'

"When a multi-million dollar company comes in, $200,00 or $300,000 isn't going to affect them. They're going to make that back in a year."

So, why haven't more retail chains come to Crestview?

Steele offers an explanation.

"The reason the restaurants don't come is because they won't come until that trip count out there on (S.R.) 85 is over 50,000," he says.

DEVELOPMENT IS COMING

Crestview officials have openly, willingly talked to undisclosed, popular restaurant and retail chain developers to learn how the city can attract them, Steele said.

"Every time we talked to them, they said, 'The trips just aren't there,'" he said. "Until we get to 50,000 trips a day, they're not going to come."

However, "We have just reached that threshold."

For resident Mike Sayers, city officials' explanations sound more like excuses. 

"First, businesses couldn't come because we had too much traffic… now they can't come because we have too little traffic," he said.
 
"These folks are ready to move to up to D.C."

But Mayor David Cadle says the potential for development is real. 

Nationally known eateries are now "seriously eyeing opening" on Ferdon Boulevard South behind Wendy's, Mayor David Cadle said. "Several (undisclosed) restaurant chains have shown interest in coming to Crestview, and we are presently in discussions with them and have hopes these talks will come to fruition," he said.

The city has taken several steps to facilitate bringing these restaurants to town, including annexing property for access to the development area, he said.

If the talks get serious, and the impact fee is no longer waived, Steele had one recommendation: "call them something else," he said.

"'Fee' is such a dirty word."

In the meantime, some residents have their own ideas about the subject.

"Why not try to put some new business on Highway 90 and North 85? Ann Walden said. Crestview people will still come — not everything should be built on the South end."
 
Barbara Fitzpatrick agreed.
 
"A lot of room out on East and West 90. Not much out on East 90, and West 90 has even less!" she said. 

 

 

IMPACT FEES: The Crestview City Council will discuss traffic impact fees at a 4:30 p.m. workshop before its 6 p.m. regular meeting Dec. 14 at city hall.

TRANSPORTATION: Crestview City Councilman JB Whitten will host an informal town hall meeting with Public Works Director Wayne Steele and city engineer Fred Cook to address transportation issues, 6 p.m. Dec. 17, at Hub City Smokehouse, 168 Main St. S.

●●●●●●

WHAT'S COMING

Crestview Growth Management Director Teresa Gaillard said these businesses have submitted detailed development plans and engineering drawings, and are seeking development orders to build in Crestview:

Day's Catfish: State Road 85 North behind McDonald's and CCB Bank, 4,500 square feet with drive-thru and 190-seat restaurant

Elite Real Estate Services: remodeling McCaskill Street housing units for a commercial real estate office

Express Oil Crestview: 5,100-square-foot auto repair and lube, plus 4,500-square-foot retail space on former Okaloosa Academy site

Ferdon retail project between Publix and Sonic: 12,000-square-foot retail and 8,200-square-foot space for restaurants

Jimmy John's sub sandwiches: Former Shell station next to McDonald's below Wal-Mart

Redstone Commons, phase 3A: 47 more single-family homes

Shiloh Place, 18 single family lots, on Johnson Court off Duggan Avenue

WANT TO GO?

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Crestview officials: Despite rumors, development is rising

Laurel Hill council defers annexation rules

LAUREL HILL — The City Council has deferred action on a proposed resolution defining the annexation procedure until after a Jan. 7, 2016, workshop.

The issue of having a set of rules governing how a property owner may request annexation into Laurel Hill's city limits arose after the city charged former Councilman Johnny James a $2,500 annexation fee, then the council tried to assess almost $1,000 more to cover consultant's fees.

Council Chairman Larry Hendren said the proposed resolution had nothing to do with James' situation, but was an attempt to codify the procedure to prevent similar situations.

Councilman Scott Moneypenny said he researched state statutes governing municipal annexations as well as another city's policy.

"I think we need to review what this city's done before we go deeper into annexation so we don't come across any problems in the future with fees or anything," Moneypenny said.

Moneypenny said city attorney Daniel Campbell needs to be involved in reviewing the materials and developing the resolution.

As Moneypenny distributed copies of his research, the council's newest member, Travis Dewrell, recommended that city leaders set a workshop to discuss the matter in greater detail.

Hendren, responding to a resident's question, said the reason the proposed resolution required a $6,500 annexation fee rather than the current $2,500 fee James was charged was to cover expenses including property surveys, a planning consultant and advertising costs for any necessary public hearings.

"The reason for the jump is the previous resolution was way outdated,” Hendren said.

When the resident inquired about annexation's benefits, among factors like attaining city services such as water and fire protection, Dewrell said city residents also don't have to pay Almarante Fire District's annual assessment.

"So in 65 years I'd break even with their $100 annual assessment," the resident said to laughter around the chamber.

Moneypenny said another benefit is property values are generally higher within a municipality. Having additional residents also benefits the city, he said.

"It increases the city's tax base," he said. "If development had ever taken place, that increases your population base which increases your tax base."

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Laurel Hill council defers annexation rules

Temporary lane closure planned on State Road 85

CHIPLEY – The southbound outside lane of State Road 85, just north of Range Road 232 will be temporarily closed from 8 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 6 to 6 a.m. Monday, Dec. 7 as crews work in the shoulder area. Drivers are reminded to be alert to slowing traffic.

Construction activities are weather dependent and may be delayed or rescheduled in the event of inclement weather. Motorists are reminded to obey the posted speed limit, to travel with care through the work zone, and to watch for construction equipment and workers entering and exiting the roadway.

The http://www.facebook.com/StateRoad123 construction page is the fastest and easiest way to stay informed about scheduled lane closures and other construction-related impacts. 

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Temporary lane closure planned on State Road 85

Traffic alerts announced for Okaloosa and Walton counties

CHIPLEY — Drivers will encounter traffic disruptions on the following state roads in Okaloosa and Walton counties as crews perform construction activities. 

All activities are weather dependent and may be delayed or re-scheduled in the event of inclement weather. 

Motorists are reminded to use caution, especially at night, when traveling in a work zone and to watch for construction workers and equipment entering and exiting the roadway. 

 ●State Roads 20 and 285 in Niceville, Okaloosa County: From 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, Dec. 5, drivers will encounter traffic disruptions as the City of Niceville holds its annual Christmas parade.

●U.S. Highway 98 in Destin, Okaloosa County: From 9-11 a.m. Saturday, Dec. 5, the eastbound lanes of U.S. 98 in Destin from the Boardwalk to the Destin Bridge will be closed. Crews will transition westbound lanes to handle two-way (one lane in each direction) traffic during the Special Forces Association 7 Jingle Bell Jog.

 ●U.S. Highway 331, Clyde B. Wells Bridge, Walton County: Alternating lane closures are planned 7 p.m. to 6 a.m. Monday, Dec. 7 and Wednesday, Dec. 10 as crews place concrete for the new bridge.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Traffic alerts announced for Okaloosa and Walton counties

Laurel Hill council defers annexation rules

LAUREL HILL — The City Council has deferred action on a proposed resolution defining the procedure for annexation into the city until after a Jan. 7, 2016, workshop.

The issue of having a prescribed set of rules governing how a property owner may request annexation into the Laurel Hill's city limits arose after the city charged former Councilman Johnny James a $2,500 annexation fee, then the council tried to assess nearly $1,000 more to cover consultant's fees.

Council Chairman Larry Hendren said the proposed resolution had nothing to do with James' situation, but was an attempt to codify the procedure to prevent future similar situations from arising.

Councilman Scott Moneypenny said he had researched state statutes governing municipal annexations as well as another city's policy.

"I think we need to review what this city's done before we go deeper into annexation so we don't come across any problems in the future with fees or anything," Moneypenny said.

Moneypenny said city attorney Daniel Campbell needs to be involved in developing the resolution.

As Moneypenny distributed copies of his research, the council's newest member, Travis Dewrell, recommended the body hold a workshop to discuss the materials in greater detail.

Hendren, responding to a resident's question, said the reason the proposed resolution required a $6,500 annexation fee rather than the current $2,500 fee James was required to pay, was to cover expenses including property surveys, a planning consultant and advertising costs for public hearings.

"That's the reason for the jump" in price, Hendren said. "The reason for the jump is the previous resolution was way outdated."

When the resident inquired about the benefits of annexation, among factors such as attaining city services such as water and the fire department, Dewrell said city residents don't have to pay Almarante Fire District's annual assessment.

"So in 65 years I'd break even with their $100 annual assessment," the resident said to laughter around the chamber.

Moneypenny said another benefit is property values are generally higher within a municipality. Additional residents also benefit the city, he said.

"It increases the city's tax base," he said. "If development had ever taken place, that increases your population base which increases your tax base."

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Laurel Hill council defers annexation rules

Okaloosa sheriff's office achieves national accreditation

Okaloosa County Sheriff's Office employees accept their accreditation notice from Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies officials. Pictured from left are CALEA Executive Director Craig Hartley Jr.; Inspector Bob Norris, OCSO accreditation manager; Okaloosa Sheriff Larry Ashley; Major Greg Gaddis, OCSO operations bureau chief; Lt. Jay Jones, OCSO judicial services commander; Roberta Holloway, OCSO training coordinator; Capt. Ron Gay, OCSO Office of Professional Standards commander; Sgt. Matt Harrison, OCSO Judicial Services supervisor; and CALEA Commission Chairman Richard Myers.

CRESTVIEW — The Okaloosa County Sheriff's Office is now Northwest Florida's first, and only, law enforcement agency awarded National Accreditation by the Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies.

The CALEA program is the primary method for an agency to voluntarily demonstrate its commitment to excellence. Fewer than 5 percent of the nation's 18,000 law enforcement agencies are nationally accredited.

Standards focus on department policies, and operational procedures such as police training, use of force, emergency preparedness and accountability. Compliance with these standards means a law enforcement agency follows a code of conduct recognized by law enforcement peers, the legal system and the public, and it meets the best professional requirements and practices for agencies nationwide.  

The OCSO — awarded the honor Nov. 21 at CALEA’s  winter conference — "is committed to providing enhanced service to the citizens of Okaloosa County, while upholding the highest standards of law enforcement practices in training, policies and procedures,” Sheriff Larry Ashley said. “Our agency earned statewide accreditation from the Commission for Florida Law Enforcement Accreditation in July 2010.

"… We believe this commitment puts us among the nation’s leaders in law enforcement professional development.”

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Okaloosa sheriff's office achieves national accreditation

Crestview town hall on transportation scheduled

CRESTVIEW — City Councilman JB Whitten’s next informal town hall meeting will offer residents an opportunity to discuss transportation issues.

Crestview Public Works Director Wayne Steele and city engineer Fred Cook will join Whitten for the gathering, set for 6 p.m. Dec. 17 at Hub City Smokehouse, 168 Main St. S.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Crestview town hall on transportation scheduled

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