|
Carroll
County Independent
January
04, 2007
New CMI permit under review
by Terry Leavitt
Editor
TAMWORTH - Tamworth planning board has accepted
Club Motorsports' new special use application for review.
The new application does not include any
reference to a racetrack or motorsports road course, but requests
permission from the town to cross wetlands in order to build roads and
access ways on the property. Having accepted the application as
complete, the board has 65 days to make a decision as to whether or not
to approve it and grant a permit. The board will hold a public hearing
as part of its review process, but did not schedule a date for the
hearing.
Planning board members deliberated for about an
hour last Wednesday night (Dec. 28) before making their decision to
accept the application as complete. The meeting took place in a full
meeting room at Tamworth Town House last Wednesday evening.
Before planning board members addressed the
issue of whether the application is complete, they first had to make a
decision about whether or not any member of the board should recuse
himself from sitting in review of it.
Board member David Cluff raised the issue of
recusals, asking if those members who had recused themselves for
previous applications by Club Motorsports should recuse themselves once
again. Board members Herb Cooper, Tom Cleveland and Dom Bergin recused
themselves in past reviews of applications from Club Motorsports, after
the company showed evidence that they had spoken out publicly or signed
petitions or letters in opposition to the company's proposed racetrack.
The board consulted with town attorney Rick
Sager and Sager recommended that the board ask the applicant if the
company is seeking recusals.
Cooper objected to the suggestion, saying that
it is up to the planning board, not the applicant to make such
decisions. "If they said they want us recused, why does that make
it correct?" he asked.
"It's the applicant's application and
they're entitled to a board that meets the juror standards," Sager
said.
He also said without a request for recusals from
the applicant, he saw no reason for the board to even discuss the issue.
Chairman David Goodson asked Club Motorsports
representatives if the company was looking for recusals in regard to
this application.
Thomas Quarles, representing Club Motorsports,
said the company continues to ask for recusals from those board members.
Quarles said, "Just for the sake of
consistency, I think its important and imperative that those gentlemen
not consider this request under any board." By law, he said, the
applicant is required to make such requests at the beginning of the
process. "We have to be consistent, and we have to ask that the
board be consistent."
But given that the applicant was requesting
recusals, Sager said, he saw no reason why the planning board members
should recuse themselves if the application does not pertain to a
racetrack, unless an individual board member feels he or she cannot meet
the juror standard.
Quarles did not offer any information as to
whether the intended use was a race track or any other facility, but
said, "I don't think anyone sensibly can draw a distinction between
CMI and access. Feelings have clearly set in on this project one way or
another. I think its pretty clear that their feelings are set with this
project."
He said it was not intellectually honest for the
planning board to say that members do not have set feelings about the
issue.
Quarles said at least one member of the board
was on record as referring to a member of Club Motorsports as a
"liar," which would go beyond the issue of the track itself.
Cooper said he believes that Club Motorsports
should be willing to say what its plans for the land are. "I think
if you were honest in your proposal of this application, you would have
been more forthcoming with what the proposal is," he said.
"You are telling the board nothing. You could be developing a spa
as far as I'm concerned. You're telling me to be intellectually honest?
Come on."
He said he signed something dealing with a
racetrack, and has no personal vendetta against Club Motorsports or any
of its members.
"The activities are road way and access. It
has nothing to do with a racetrack," Cleveland said, and so he too
saw no reason to recuse himself.
"That sounds quite practical but you have
to consider the juror standpoint," Cluff said.
The board passed a motion to review the
application with the current board, with a vote of 4-2 in favor of
keeping the current board. Board members Wayne Lloyd and David Cluff
voted against the motion.
But what's it for?
Cooper pressed Club Motorsports representatives
for more information about the company's plan. "I think we're
entitled to know what they're going to do to the wetlands," he said
before determining that the application is complete.
Other planning board members agreed, including
alternate Tom Peters, that more information was needed. "Is it a
completed application if we don't know the use?" he said.
Board chairman David Goodson said, "It
doesn't matter what they want to do with the property."
"It does. It's loose," Peters said.
"I'm not saying its not loose,"
Goodson said, but he said he believed it was adequate for an application
for access ways.
|