Articles originally published in The Times-Picayune
Tammany Rezoning Starts Next Month
Unincorporated areas must follow new codes
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
By Charlie Chapple
St. Tammany Bureau
The long process to rezone St. Tammany Parish's unincorporated areas to conform with the new parish zoning codes will begin next month and conclude in October 2009.
That's the timetable laid out by parish planning director Sidney Fontenot, who said the project, initially expected to take two to three years to complete, has been put on the fast track and streamlined so it can be done as quickly as possible.
Instead of dividing the parish into eight geographical areas, officials will divide the parish into five regions for the rezoning of almost 700 square miles of properties, parcel by parcel, Fontenot said.
In mid- to late February, parish officials plan to schedule a Saturday hearing to get more public input on the first geographical area, across south central St. Tammany, that will be rezoned.
The first region or zone is generally bordered by Louisiana 59, Louisiana 36, U.S. 11 and Lake Pontchartrain. It takes in Big Branch and Lacombe and areas near Mandeville and Abita Springs eastward to near Slidell and Pearl River.
Fontenot said a survey of existing land uses in the first region has been completed by consultants. After the public hearing, parish planners will recommend a new zoning map for the region using the classifications in the new codes.
Fontenot said the recommendation will be forwarded to the parish Zoning Commission on April 15 for public hearings and review. The proposal then will go to the Parish Council for further review, with the schedule calling for adoption of the new zoning map for the first region by October, Fontenot said.
Work to rezone other regions will be occurring simultaneously, Fontenot said, so the entire project can by completed by October 2009. Consultants already are doing a land-use survey of the second zone or region, which takes in southwestern St. Tammany, including Goodbee and areas between Covington and Madisonville, and Covington and Mandeville.
The third region takes in the southeastern corner of the parish and areas around Slidell east of U.S. 11. The final two regions take in the more rural northern half of the parish.
The new zoning codes, adopted by the Parish Council in May, have not taken effect because state law requires that new zoning classifications be imposed in a systematic and uniform manner, looking at all property in a defined area or region.
As each of the five regions is rezoned, the new classifications and codes take effect.
Rural, suburban agriculture
The new codes eliminate two major zoning classifications, suburban agriculture and R-rural. Most undeveloped land in unincorporated areas is zoned rural or suburban agriculture, which are considered "holding zones" under the existing codes adopted in 1986.
Fontenot has said the "holding pattern" contributes to hodgepodge development. When most developments are proposed under the existing codes, a developer usually asks to rezone a rural or suburban agriculture tract to the classification necessary for his project.
That results in the parish reacting to "what's proposed instead of deciding where things should go. . . . And that's not zoning," Fontenot said.
The current codes also require conditional use permits for numerous uses ranging from mobile homes to large developments. Except for the most intense industrial uses, such as a nuclear power plant, conditional uses are eliminated in the new codes by adding new classifications specifically listing the uses allowed in each.
"Once you rezone the property (to the new codes), you'll have a list of things you can do," Fontenot said, "and you don't have to get a conditional use permit."
"More important, you'll know exactly what your neighbor can do," Fontenot said Monday night while outlining the parish's game plan to the Tammany Together citizens coalition in Lacombe.
Instead of one highway commercial classification, the new codes have four. Six neighborhood commercial designations replace the two districts of light and neighborhood commercial. The new codes also have 10 instead of four single-family residential classifications, including four new "estate" districts that require homesites of at least 7, 10, 15 and 20 acres.
95 percent correct
Fontenot said parish planners will consider numerous factors in recommending the new zoning classifications for property, including existing land use, the parish's land-use plan, the elements of New Directions 2025, drainage and traffic models, infrastructure and a "greenprint" plan that sets conservation and preservation priorities for the parish.
In most cases, he said, developed properties will be rezoned to the new classification that fits the existing use. The rezoning of undeveloped properties will likely spark the biggest debates, he said.
"We'll get most of the area zoned correctly," Fontenot said. "We'll argue over 5 percent. We'll get 95 percent correct."
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Charlie Chapple can be reached at cchapple@timespicayune.com or (985) 898-4828.
© 2008 The Times-Picayune, L.L.C. All rights reserved. Used with permission of The Times-Picayune and
NOLA.com.
Parish Activists Unite to Form New Group
Tammany Together Targets Growth Issues
Tuesday, May 08, 2007
By Charlie Chapple
St. Tammany Bureau
Seeking strength in numbers and a united voice, a group of St. Tammany Parish
activists have formed a new organization, "Tammany Together," to
tackle major developmental and quality-of-life issues.
The nonprofit, nonpartisan organization essentially will be a parishwide
coalition of homeowners associations, civic groups and individuals that will
take a collective stand on the major issues facing the parish, organizers said
at a news conference Monday.
Rick Wilke, Tammany Together's interim president and board member, said there
are numerous homeowners associations and other groups throughout the parish
taking positions on issues.
But when they attend government meetings to express their views, "small
groups tend to show up, speaking with a smaller voice," Wilke said.
"They don't quite carry the weight of a larger group."
Tammany Together was formed, Wilke said, because "there has been no
forum to look at the parish as a whole so that everyone can work together to
address infrastructure problems, to address the root causes of hodgepodge
development, or to support each other in welcoming good development and fighting
bad."
Tammany Together will work "to identify issues of importance to the
citizens of St. Tammany Parish, to educate its members and others on these
issues, and to exert a positive influence to their outcome by speaking out in an
unified voice," according to its mission statement.
Wilke also is president of the Association of Associations, a coalition of
homeowners groups in the Covington area. Members of that association and others
have been working to organize Tammany Together for more than a year.
So far, the fledgling group has been using "word of mouth" to
attract its initial members, Wilke said. Now, the group is making a public
appeal for those who share Tammany Together's views to come on board, he said.
The group is hosting an informational meeting for the public and
representatives of homeowners and civic groups on May 17 at the parish
government complex on Koop Drive north of Mandeville. The session is set for
6:30 p.m. in the Parish Council chambers.
There's also a Web site, www.TammanyTogether.org, with more information about
the new organization.
The founding members of Tammany Together recently elected interim officers
and named nine of the 15 board members who will help run the organization. The
other board members will be named as other groups join Tammany Together, said
board member Bill McHugh of the recently revived Old Military Road Homeowners
Association northeast of Covington.
Other board members include Paulette Barras of Slidell, a founding member of
the Citizens for Environmental Quality; interim Vice President L.R
"Pug" Lorren of the Covington area; interim Treasurer Elizabeth
Manshel of the Penn's Chapel Road Association near Mandeville; and John Martin,
president of the Goodbee Civic Association.
Also on the board are Jeannine Meeds of Big Branch; interim Secretary Sandra
Slifer, president of the League of Women Voters of St. Tammany; and P.J.
Stakelum III, president of the Flower Estates Homeowners Association south of
Covington.
Wilke said organizations that have joined the Tammany Together include the
Association of Associations, the League of Women Voters of St. Tammany, the
Goodbee Civic Association, and the homeowners associations for Tchefuncta Trace
and Brookstone subdivisions.
. . . . . . .
Charlie Chapple can be reached at cchapple@timespicayune.com or (985) 898-4828.
© 2007 The Times-Picayune, L.L.C. All rights reserved. Used with permission of The Times-Picayune and
NOLA.com.
Tammany Politics
Friday, April 20, 2007
By Charlie Chapple
St. Tammany Bureau
. . . . . . .
A movement is afoot to organize a parishwide coalition of homeowners, non-profit and civic groups to form an united voice to address local issues in St. Tammany.
Those behind the movement, including Rick Wilke of the Covington area, have been working since last fall to create "Tammany Together." But they're keeping details of the new organization under wraps until a news conference scheduled for May 7.
Organizers include members of the Association of Associations, a coalition of about 25 homeowners groups in western St. Tammany, the Goodbee Civic Association and the League of Women Voters of St. Tammany.
Organizers say the parish has often been divided between east and west, city and unincorporated areas, and suburban and rural areas, and newcomers and longtime residents.
Tammany Together will be a non-profit, non-partisan organization that "will identify issues of importance to the citizens of St. Tammany Parish, to educate its members and others on these issues, and to exert a positive influence to their outcome by speaking out with a unified voice," according to the group's mission statement.
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(If you have a suggestion for Tammany Politics, contact reporter Charlie Chapple in Covington at cchapple@timespicayune.com or (985) 898-4828, or reporter Christine Harvey in Slidell at charvey@timespicayune.com or (985) 645-2853.)
© 2007 The Times-Picayune, L.L.C. All rights reserved. Used with permission of The Times-Picayune and
NOLA.com.