The Fayette County Board of Commissioners is back on its regular meeting schedule this week, convening Thursday at 7 p.m. at the county administrative complex in Fayetteville.
Six public hearings are on the agenda.
A rezoning has been requested from R-70 to C-S to develop a single-family residential conservation subdivision on 132.14 acres fronting Lees Lake Road and Coastline Road. Another petition involves the Rock Fork subdivision on Rocky Fork Boulevard and a request to revise the recorded final plat to include a common area for a centralized mail kiosk and open space.
Two public hearing items pertain to proposed changes to the county’s zoning ordinance. One involves the Zoning Board of Appeals as well as policies, procedures and standards governing amendments. The other addresses sections governing agricultural-residential districs and conditional use approval.
Public hearings are also scheduled regarding an alcohol/beer/wine license transfer for the Chevron Food Mart at 1488 Hwy. 92 North in Fayetteville, and a proposed permit for an inert landfill facility at 221 First Manassas Mile Road in Fayetteville.
The only item on the consent agenda, aside from previous meeting minutes, is a request to change the name of Edna Ruth Lane to Trustin Lake Drive.
After consideration discussion at the March 10 meeting over possible development of the passive park at the Justice Center, the board will hear and consider a staff recommendation of a revised conceptual design and cost estimate based on the previous discussion.
Two annexation requests by the city of Fayetteville are on the agenda for board consideration. One involves about nine-tenths of an acre at 467 Veterans Parkway with a proposed R-70 zoning (the same as its current county zoning), and the other includes two separate parcels at and near 475 Veterans Parkway totaling about 98.5 acres, with a rezoning from R-70 to PCD (planned community development).
The board will consider two requests by Commissioner Steve Brown: for the Board of Commissioners to approve all policy and procedure changes by official votes during board meetings; and to revise the county administrator’s spending limit to $50,000.
Cheryl Rogers, the county’s retiring E-911 communication director, will be recognized by the board for her 36 years of service and for earning the E-911 Director of the Year award for the state of Georgia.
Christian City will be recognized upon its 50th anniversary, and two proclamations will be issued noting March 27 as “Advo-Kids Casa Day” and April as “Safe Digging Month in Fayette County.”