About this meeting
- Government Body
- Board of County Commissioners
- Meeting Type
- Board Of County Commissioners
- Location
- Carroll County, MD
- Meeting Date
- May 7, 2026
Transcript
94 sections
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the Thursday, May 7th, 2026 open session for the Board of Carroll County Commissioners. As we always do, we'll begin with the Pledge of Allegiance and a moment of silent reflection. I pledge algiance to the flag of the United States of America and to the republic for which it stands. One nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all. I hope everybody is doing well today and I hope you'll forgive us for running a couple of minutes late. We all just came from the sheriff's annual prayer breakfast. Absolutely wonderful uh morning of camaraderie and community and prayer and Commissioner Krebs, we'll start with you for priority Carol this morning. Well, I won't discuss that. We just all came from the prayer breakfast, but it was excellent. Uh, today's the National Day of Prayer, and it is always that that breakfast has been going on for many, many, many years, and it's it's so satisfying. They go all the way from the president all the way down to local law enforcement, our first responders, and people that we just don't think about. And, you know, in this hyper political time of we always say that, but I think each year we think it gets worse. that we just have to focus on what is right and good for the people that we serve and to get get out of the rhetoric and just focus on what's important and you go back to the the book and do it. It all works out. So anyway, we did all just came from there. This is where Commissioner Coller's um coming from as well. Um the only other thing I had this week since I was on vacation last week went to visit Minnie Mouse. I'm all mini moused out with the grandkids. But um on Tuesday when I came back, I had an opportunity to speak at the chamber breakfast which is held at our local libraries. each of us go around and the chamber supports an event at our local library and I had a great
opportunity for the first time to meet with some of the local businesses in my area and uh and share some of the good things we're doing and some of the things we want to do with our local um chamber members and our library. So that's all I did this week except for catch up. Glad to have you. If I didn't answer your email yet, forgive me and give me a another week or so. Glad to have you back, Commissioner. Thank you, Commissioner Garrett. Nothing for me this morning. Thanks, Commissioner Gordon. Thank you. Uh, good morning, Carol County. Got a few things this morning. Uh, first, I wanted to give a shout out to, uh, Christine Murphy with CCC Fence. Uh, the Baltimore magazine uh, somewhat recently did an article article called Women Who Move Maryland, and she was a Carol County uh, business operator that I wanted to mention because obviously always great to see Carol County showcased. So, I wanted to give her a shout out for that. Uh secondly, wanted to give a congratulations to Emily uh Burns for being named Carol County Public School teacher of the year. As always, uh you know, we take a lot of pride in Carol County when it comes to our education and definitely our educators and just wanted to uh give her uh congratulations and uh truly appreciate all the incredible work she does in our community as do all our teachers. Uh also wanted to mention it's National Teacher Appreciation Week. I wonder if they timed that around the same time. But uh truly want to, you know, recognize and celebrate all our teachers for all the work, all the hard work they do, not only during school hours, but also after school hours, mentoring kids and just all the devotion they put forward in the community. Truly truly appreciate the sacrifice and countless ways that they all make a difference. This week is also Go ahead, Chris. Small business week. So, uh, as we all know, our small businesses are a significant backbone of our community. Um, many of us do shop locally. I would just suggest anytime we can,
let's please support our local businesses because they're not just businesses, their families. These are the people that not only support our nonprofits, but also our wreck and park teams, as well as uh keep Carol County being what Carol County is vibrantly. So, if you could, I would encourage anyone to take a a moment, you know, shop, dine local, support our local businesses in any way we can. And next, I'm going to move on to last night. Last night, uh, as everyone knows, the five of us were at the uh, budget meeting, but before that, I had the pleasure of being at the uh, Boys and Girls Club youth of the year event. So, first off, you have in the one photo there, Aaron Bishop from the Boys and Girls Club with uh Vimar, who is a senior graduating who is the youth of the year for Carol County. Today, he is in Haggartown competing for the Maryland Youth of the Year. So, we might get number six. Let's keep our fingers and toes crossed. Uh just exceptional, exceptional evening for all the kids involved. And then last night I and uh Jana had the honor of um uh announcing a new scholarship that we had set up this year and this was the first recipient. This is Andrea who received it. She is going to Salsbury next year. So we created a scholarship called the driven to dream scholarship. The scholarship which was established this year uh is to support a member of the Boys and Girls Club who demonstrate determination, strong character, leadership and a commitment to achieving their goals. scholarship was created to help a deserving student pursue post-secary education, vocational training, or other career advancing opportunities. And we wanted the scholarship to recogn for the youth of the community. So, had a great time at that last night. Then had to rush over to our budget meeting, which was, you know, was good turnout last night. was a pretty uh quick budget
meeting which I was not expecting. And that is all for me. Thank you very much, Commissioner Gordon. Commissioner Kyler. Okay. Thank you. Um yeah, busy busy busy times. Um last Thursday after our open session, we had employee appreciation day out at the A Center. Great time, great people. Uh and uh um I want to thank HR. I want to thank all the staff for setting it up. Um, a lot of games. Uh, I had two or three dimes and on the second one I won two glasses. I didn't think you could win two at the same time, but I did. So, uh, fun games and, uh, fun lunch. Always always good. Um, on Friday, I went early to, uh, Carol Citizens for Racial Equality at the community college. uh great event. Um great I got to hear the first presentation and uh and very very good. Um she's an awesome lady and uh um I wish I could have stayed for the rest of the day, but I had many other things to do. But great event, great start. Um I went out to uh Union Mills Homestead. Um, and I didn't I didn't realize uh we were receiving the preservation awards from the state of Maryland. I thought Union Mills was, but uh we received it. Um, it's here in the office and uh I want to thank Union Mills for all they've done out there and the uh the flower market was going on too. A lot of people buying a lot of stuff. I was smart enough to buy a hanging basket and I didn't know what it was but it's I don't know it's called straw flowers or something and uh
um Rhonda liked it so I lucked out. Um I want to thank Dean Lyster and uh Brian Boi for all they do out there and they got awards also uh with their name on it. So uh yeah, great event. um one of the jewels of Carol County and uh it's I told him um I'm sorry I I went off on a tangent. Uh we lost uh Mad Shrivever Franklin and uh her service is coming up. Her brother Frank was there. Sorry. Um I go off on a tangent, but uh it was awful to lose Match, but I'll still pick on the Shrivevers. Um, I told him it was the first time I've been there that they had probably minimum wage paid parkers. I said, "Every other time I've been here, a Shrivever has volunteered and parked cars." So, um, they they must be rowing in money because they actually paid people. Um, and then we had some some staff meetings that day. on Saturday, um May the 2nd, um there was a ribbon cutting at Christmas Tree Park in Manchester for um just the floor, just the base of a totally accessible tot lot. And uh I don't want the town of Manchester to kill me, but they probably will. Just the floor, just the rubber floor. 130,000. I told him uh Vernon Smith and I were part of the first ever tot lot at Manchester Elementary. The entire tot cost about 15,000 and uh we were allowed to be volunteer laborers to put it up. Now liability won't let you do that. But but great for the
town of Manchester and great in memory of Haley. We got to talk to her mom who uh um we knew her from North Carol and uh and her father and uh it it's just awesome that they set up a foundation. They do so much. Um then we went on to uh the American Legion in Westminster. Junior Fischer turned 100 and uh it I think it's 130 people there celebrating his birthday and uh he uh I hope I can be that active at the age I am much less at 100. He was jumping around and as we leaving he was putting on music and I think he was going to dance. Um, Sunday was the uh veteran celebration at the uh farm museum. Awesome, awesome event. Uh, and uh, Secretary Rostine and I and I want to thank the committee and, uh, the patience of some of the people. Um, most of the day we rode around in golf carts, which let us see 10 times as many people as we would have walking around. and we'd jump out and do selfies or jump out and talk to people and then head on we got to see the helicopter take off. Um didn't climb on top of it like some people did but uh you know it it's it just it was a great day um for next year just and I know you won't believe but it was sunny, it was beautiful. make it just a little bit warmer. It was perfect. It was a
perfect day. But but great day. Um and uh earlier this week I got to see uh the early couple. Um she spoke and he talked and and that was great. um got to see the chamber breakfast and listen to Commissioner Krebs talk in Eldersburg. And uh last night um I had an activity and I it's the first time in years we've missed the Boys and Girls Club, but it was just tough to make it. And uh actually Wyinners Mill uh National Honor Society had their program and uh we got to watch my grandson get his cord I guess it's called that he gets to wear and graduation and they inducted some new new people and uh um unless something happens wild our granddaughter there will be in it too. Um, and uh, it it's just it's a great program and and of course everybody I think knows National Honor Society and grades and all that, but they also do volunteer hours and um, I didn't know it. um my middle son was in it and I probably didn't pay attention but um the chord you get and what you get as a senior is also uh indicative of how many volunteer hours you did. So it's not just academics, it's it's community work, too. Um, then we did our uh public hearing and like Commissioner Gordon said, it was a little bit shorter than we could have expected and uh great comments. Uh, I'm I'm glad I'm glad the commenters that did come came and uh talked to a bunch of them individually
afterwards and a good event. Um this morning um was the sheriff's prayer breakfast and uh um nice event, nice uh individuals giving prayers and and a nice nice people there to talk to and I talked to some of them afterwards and uh it just a good event. the sheriff has his uh picnic at lunch. So, I did ask him what we were doing for dinner and he kind of told me I was on my own. So, uh um I think that catches me up for the week and thank you for listening and uh thank you for the veteran celebration, the uh employee appreciation. There's a lot of good events this week. Um and and uh so many veterans out there and both at uh Junior's um birthday, we talked about guard. He was he was one of those guys that was Navy World War II, left the Navy, and then became Army National Guard for the rest of his career. And it it's it's interesting. There's a number of veterans that served in two different types of service. And and and it's awesome. So, we talked about that, but we talked about in my last commercial here this morning for the veterans out there, you deserve what Carol County can do for you and and you deserve it. Number one, and number two, uh tell your friends because there's still people not aware of it. I learned uh many many years ago with North Carolina Rec Council and Manchester Wrestling, you can put it on a billboard, you can put it in a paper, you can hand each kid a hand out, and there's still people that don't know and don't get the word on what's going on. And uh so veterans, uh you deserve it and ask
about it and and pursue it. Thank you. Thank you very much, Commissioner Kyler. And uh with the exception of me uh uh echoing all the uh uh kind sentiments of my friends up here regarding the veteran celebration, congratulations again on how well that turned out. I'm going to presend my own report this morning in the interest of uh time. I know we have two items of very uh significant uh discussion ahead of us. So I want to make sure we uh move along a bit here. So uh Commissioner Gordon, I believe you have a proclamation. Uh yes, we do. We have a proclamation for mental health awareness month and would like to ask anyone that wants to come up to the table, please do. Good morning to you both. Good morning. Morning. So, I'm going to let you both speak first about what you all do in Carol County for mental health. So, I'm the CEO at Carol County Youth Service Bureau, Lisa Goff, and our clinical director, uh, Angela Schmar. And just appreciate the recognition. This is such an important issue, and unfortunately with stigma, you know, people don't either access services, there's a huge gap. You know, when someone has something like diabetes, within a couple months or a couple years, they're within they're in treatment. you know, they're receiving services and medication and adjusting their lifestyle where it can be 10 to 15 years from the onset of someone having symptoms with a mental health disorder um or or struggle before they even think about starting to get help or treatment. So, appreciate the commissioners just taking the time to recognize the importance of care um and that we have services here in the county to really support all ages. And uh this is our clinical director, Angela Schmar, um who oversees the outpatient clinic that
we have as well as some of our community based services. And I just I want to thank you for your support of us too over the years. I've been there a long time and the support of the commissioners has always been really, you know, amazing and very helpful to us. Okay. Well, I'm going to go ahead and read the proclamation. proclamation. May is mental health awareness month. Whereas mental health awareness month has been observed since 1949 and has been a way to help people recognize the ways mental illness impacts lives, educate about available services, and highlight ways to advocate for those with mental illnesses and recognition and education are important. Ways to remove the stigma associated with mental illness. Mental Health Awareness Month creates a time and space to start a conversation. Talking openly about mental health can reduce misconceptions and stigma and can encourage those who are suffering to seek help and find a support network. And as we observe Mental Health Month this May, we recognize that the path to wellness is one we walk together. We honor the Carol County Youth Service Bureau and our dedicated network of behavioral health agencies for their unwavering commitment to providing a continuum of care from prevention and intervention to life-changing treatment. And by meeting our residents where they are, these organizations ensure that every child, adult, and family in Carroll County has the support they need to experience more good days together. and we stand with our providers and our community in fostering resilience, reducing stigma, and building a healthier, more connected Carol County for all. Now, therefore, we, the board of Carol County Commissioners, to hereby proclaim May as mental health awareness month in Carol County and urge all communities to increase awareness and understanding of mental health, adopted the 7th day of May, 2026, signed the board of Carol County Commissioners. Well, thank you very much for coming in. Thank you
for all that you do. I know it's an incredibly difficult thing to do, but incredibly grateful that that someone has the the capacity to do it. I know it's difficult and God bless you for it. I'll just echo those comments and just say a couple brief things. Um, I'm always, I guess, intrigued, for lack of a better way of putting it, that we live in a society, especially in 2026 and even earlier, that you break an arm, you go to the doctors, you have another issue, you go get help. But for some reason, uh, in some environments, we still don't understand that there shouldn't be a stigma to mental health. And, uh, I know it's at times very challenging to find, uh, providers. I know it can be exceptionally difficult for people, but I truly appreciate all the hard work you and a number of other organizations are doing in our community. And uh I I think I think there's probably more of us that need a little assistance. It's not a bad thing, but uh truly appreciate all the hard work and dedication. Thank you. Thank you. Any other comments from our friends up here? Thank Thank you very much. you. It's It's a tireless effort and uh you don't always get thanks, but this morning you're getting it. Thank you, Commissioner. Thank you very much. Absolutely. We'll do a photo, maybe have them bring the rest of the group up front and we can just How many you guys got to stay up? We probably need to stay up here. You got Sorry, Susan. Am
I okay? You normally like being blocked by something like duck down a little. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you guys. That's yours. That's yours. All right. Up next on our agenda, we have grant and approval to submit application and acceptance of the award for the FY27 and Maryland Criminal Intelligence Network program. We're joined by our venerable states attorney this morning. Good morning. Good morning. Good morning. Um, seated next to me is uh Liz Kamudi who is our Mson prosecutor and she is phenomenal. Uh I don't think I'm overstating it when I say that uh from a public state safety standpoint, this is one of the more important grants that uh you'll have presented to you. So at this point, without any further ado, Liz, and we love the county contribution part. Yes. Yes. It's it's it's small that and uh you get a lot of bang for the buck with that. Yes, definitely. Now good morning everyone. Good morning. Good morning. Yes, we have submitted a briefing paper. Um it's about um basically application to renew for this year uh the fiscal year um uh 2027 uh MSON grant uh which is uh uh goes from July 1st through June 30th of next year. Um again u MSON has been vital.
We've been very busy this past year. um really um have upped the numbers of uh um investigations and prosecutions. It's been very successful. Um this grant will um continue the critical work and provide um funding for um two positions. It does fund um my position as well as a crime analyst and it includes requests for data sharing software, surveillance, training, overtime funding for local law enforcement agencies. We also were um successful this year. there was a um we asked for an additional amount for overtime funding from the governor's office and that was granted. So, we were happy with that. There was definitely the need for that. Um and that is is shared between uh the sheriff's office uh at this point Maryland State Police has joined in on the task force, the Westminster Police Department, and also in the past year the Tonytown Police Department has joined. So, it's been very successful. of the collaboration efforts which is the purpose of this um are being affected and um so I'm happy to present. I do um respectfully request the county contribution for fringe benefits. The grant only covers up to 30% of salary fringe benefits. So that's what the additional ask is for and um thank you. Thank you very much. I move the board of commissioners approve the submission of the FY27 27 Maryland Criminal Intelligence Network grant application and accept the award. Second. We have a motion. We have a second. Is there any discussion? I just had a question. Um we al often ask how often these things get um the grants come and go. How many years have we been getting the grant? Um I believe this is the seventh sixth or seventh year. I'd have to double check on the narrative, but I It's good. It's good that they've continued that instead of left. And it has been they did submit um success like they there's been a review of the past I think it is seven years um that was submitted to the governor's office um to just show that you know the the bang for the buck is really
there good because a lot of times they just leave us hanging and then you're like what do we do but I'm glad that they're continuing to fund it and it's been working very well. Yes. Thank you. All right. Any any other discussion? All those in favor. All those opposed motion carries. Thank you both very much. Thank you. Thank you. Have a good day. You as well. Thank you. All right. So, up next we have a briefing discussion on retirement homes and retirement villages. And so, uh you'll notice that we have uh two more items on the agenda today, but both of these uh would pro probably prove to be uh quite substantial in terms of the uh breath and discussion that may ensue from them. So, I'm going to suggest that uh what we do is we go through the entire presentation. We'll make note of our questions or comments that we have along the way. Let them get through the presentation. uh so we can uh uh get that completed and then ask the uh questions that we may have. So without further ado, Daffany, I'll turn it over to you to introduce our guests. Thanks so much. Good morning everybody. Daffhany Daly with the Department of Planning and Land Management. I'm here with Troy Trex and Seth Coons from Michael Michael Baker International. um they are the consultants working to uh go through the items addressed in the four different uh development deferrals. So um if you recall we have um deferrals on retirement homes and retirement villages. That's one item. Self-service storage facilities, cluster subdivisions and planned commercials. sorry, plan commercial centers. Um the work for each of these involves three different tasks. So the first task is a review of um our current uh uh
um situation, what what we have in our codes, how that aligns with our plans, that sort of thing. The second task is to look at best practices for each of these development categories and then the third task will be to suggest specific code revisions. Um what we have today is a report on the first two tasks of one of those development types which is retirement homes and retirement villages. At the end of the presentation, what we're hoping to do is get some direction for you all from you all on the types of code revisions that they could look at as part of task three for this particular use. So, with that context set up, I'm going to turn it over to Troy and Seth to walk you through what they've found so far and some of the best practices that they've uh surfaced. You might want to help them pull up the I'm sorry could probably do it a little more. There it is. It's right there. You're good. I know what it looks like. There we go. Okay. Good morning, commissioners. Thank you so much again. Troy Truax with Michael Baker International. Uh had the pleasure of working in Carol County before, namely in Sykesville, Maryland. Uh work with town manager go Joe Kosentini uh several years ago. Oh, Joe and I go way back, but uh had the pleasure of preparing Sykesville's new comprehensive plan and then currently have been working uh still working, if you will, of uh rewriting their zoning and subdivision, which is a new unified development code. So, um but it's been great to travel through uh your neck of the woods, uh and be here today and help you with this project. I'll get started and Seth's gonna chime in. Um maybe Seth, you can just advance the slides. Keep on going there.
Um so again as Daphne said on this slide um we're focusing right now on on this first two tasks is uh we collectively call them age re uh age restricted communities uh namely retirement homes and retirement villages. Those are two prescribed uses uh provided for in your zoning code and they're defined there in that document. Um, first of all, we wanted to evaluate your your comprehensive plan, not only for Carol County, but also the Freedom Area Comprehensive Plan, the Thinksburg area corridor plan, and evaluate are there consistencies or inconsistencies with those policy documents and how they're actually implemented through the zoning code, um, if you will. And then also too, as Daffhany mentioned, we've tried to look outside your county boundaries to look for other examples, what we call best practices to say, "Hey, how are retirement homes, retirement villages, how are these done in other areas that we might think about exemplify good community planning uh uh practices and ideals. Um, again, these are the the current plans that we evaluated. Um, and then also to I think I've covered this, you can keep on going then, Seth. Um so the regulatory review um again chapter 155 is your development and subdivision of land uh section um if you will um and then also too in the code zoning is under uh 58. Um what our key findings are um age restricted housing is permitted in several districts and I know you have tackled this issue uh before and the staff has done Chris and Daphne have done a great job of giving us the background history on that. Currently, age restricted housing is permitted as a conditional use in the R20,000. Uh just villages only. So there's retirement homes and retirement villages. Villages only are permitted in the R20. Uh R10,000 and R7500 and then permitted by right in the C1 and C2 districts. Uh regulations rely heavily on general residential standards. So
again, one thing that we find you'll see in our presentation is that what are the expectations that you as a a community are looking for in these types of products, these types of developments. And what we're finding is that there's not a lot of I'll call it meat to the bones when it comes to design standards. So, it's left then having uh your yourselves, your planning and zoning commission as well as the applicants basically not guessing but saying they're meeting the basic requirements and then the reaction is well that's not really what we envision this community to be. So, what we're finding is you probably definitely need and that's jumping to some of the policy recommendations. Make sure you have clear design standards laid out because one thing we think about age restricted housing, it's not just a residential subdivision where people are, you know, living there for the day, going to their work. These are places where individuals with active living lifestyles. You know, a lot of times we think about retirement individuals 55 plus. I mean, I'm 53. I'm going to be in that age category in a couple years, uh, which I don't like to think about, but we're active. I mean no longer are people you know uh going to nursing homes although their continuing care is part of a the discussion not for this topic but it's part of the overall discussion but certainly we're finding that people go and spend their retirement in a village or a setting where there's activities and amenities and that's what we're finding in some of these best practices. So again that goes lays into some of the design standards and requirements among other things uh that we have identified in there and that also talks about some of the limited use uh specific requirements and and and spec specifications in your ordinance. So I do a lot of zoning work um if you don't explicitly call it out um it's not provided for. So it's left up for anybody's interpretation and also to on the back end if you have planning and zoning commission officials. I'm a planning comm member of my municipality for 27 years. Um, so if it's in the code, great. If it's not, then unless it's a conditional use, we don't have much
say and and what we can dictate or require, even though that we're thinking like, boy, I wish they would have actually designed that better. So, what we what we we see is what we react to on the back end. Um, next slide there, Seth. So, some of the issues, uh, again, scale and compatibility, uh, like Snowden's Creek, for example, was a a multi-story apartment building. Uh, that would be a retirement home. Um, you know, what we've seen in the field tour that we took, uh, Commissioner Krebs was part of that field tour and Roberto as well with staff is that that's a product that's situated right in the middle of a residential single family, one-story type of uh, uh, lower density, medium density development. And, uh, no difference to that project. there's no amenities. It's a parking lot with a high-rise building to it. So, we think about, okay, that that's serving a purpose, but again, on the on the flip side, could we have done maybe a better job of requiring amenities? Because you go to some retirement villages or even apartments, and you'll see in our best practices, there's a lot of amenities, even a gazebo um of open space areas where people can get out of their apartment living or what have you to enjoy that outside area. So, that's just one. I'll call it a deficiency, but it's might be a design deficiency that you would see. And also thinking about the context of that scale of building placed in the setting of that residential community is also gives you kind of a a pause for consideration going forward. Uh we talked about lack of community amenities. Uh universal design. I think I touched upon that in terms of aging and place. You think about you know you you want to start living there today as an active retiree member of that community but you know 10 20 years down the road life takes its uh toll on everybody and we don't know. But there's also that I don't want to say continuum of care but also choices of housing products within that development if you only left with a single product. You're not giving a variety of of options for affordability but also scalability depending on uh your life situation going forward. And then I think I talked about disparity between
zoning and expectations uh and projects like Nellsacres. There's one, you know, on the surface, beautiful looking product, um, if you will, but there's a lot of lot packed into that small area. Um so if you start to drive through it um when we've seen a lot of other examples I think Amble Brook up in Gettysburg which is one of our best practices or Bloomfields in Frederick much larger scale developments but you can also if you can even think about it as a smaller scale just the fact that you have more open space usable open space also there's space between the buildings there's a variety of products there um I would say you know Nell's acres beautiful product no but but in terms of the design and layout I think there could have been some opportunity for improvement, but again, there's no standards. There's no design standards for site layout or anything. And also too, we saw some issues. If I were a retiree, if I'm having mobility issues, you know, trying to park my car, ingress and egress in my car is really challenging. You're open your door up to the edge of the pavement and there's grass. I I don't have a place for a walker. Um, also too, inside the garage or even the entry levels, you know, you're up steps. So again, you have to think about these are for retirees today that have active lifestyles, but also retirees that maybe need accommodations immediately upon arriving in those communities, but they still want their sense of independence. Um, and also to pedestrian connectivity, parking. We understand that particular project gets overparked on the weekends because visitors are coming in. So again, it comes down to the site design and amenities. And I think that's one of the biggest kind of recommendations we would think about from a policy standpoint. And then finally, one thing we saw is emergency access. I know in my planning commission days of 27 years in doing planning, um, one thing that we really enforce and we codify is the NF NFPA standards for fire access and emergency access. You know, if our developments don't have at least two points of ingress and egress, and if you can't
provide for it, you better figure out a way to do it in a temporary basis via a gravel a crossing or an easement that can actually handle the gross vehicle weight of a fire apparatus, if you will. That's one solution we've come up with. But that's one thing to think about too, making sure that those types of standards. Um, and I understand you get your, you know, your fire chiefs and everybody start to review these plans, but make sure there's clear standards and think about maybe there's an opportunity to codify uh those requirements and you do it elsewhere. We've seen where NFPA is recognized elsewhere and like your site development code, but this would be another area for improvement uh in that. Um, best practices, I I'll go through these at a high level. Um again uh some of the best practices highlights. One thing that we see in these planning projects there's flexibility. I mean these are significant projects that have a lot of amenities typically a lot of different types of use involvement in terms of the different types of residential products. So we always try to think about it you know the way that you approve them either permitted by right or possibly actually think about the process of conditional use. And one thing you'll see in our recommendations is possibly even leveraging your PUD, your plan unit development. You provide for that for the R10 and R7500 for certain situations. That's a great process because that allows you to have a master planning process as that application comes in. And then you also are able to provide flexibility for both the applicant and also the reviewers reviewers on the county side to make sure that hey there's a lot of considerations in this project. Now's the time to actually think about that through the PUD process and always on the back end. You're writing and prescribing the bulk and area and density and all those types of standards through the PUD approval process. So again, that's a great tool that you currently have in your code that might be considered uh for these types of projects to actually add more flexibility because there's a lot of times you don't
anticipate until it hits your hits your desk and the applications there. Um also establish clear standards for permitted uses and open space. A lot of these projects do just that uh through their code provisions. Um we talked about conditional use or special exception approvals uh and not just treated as a permitted by right because these are typically have special requirements special elements of of safety health provisions that we have to think about. Um open space is a huge amenity. Certainly we need to ensure that there's walkability accessibility but also think about those amenities that support those types of active uh living retirement living uh lifestyles. Um, and then also too, use regulations that attract developers who understand the product. Not saying that those that with Nell's Acres, I know that's Ryan Holmes, do not because we've seen them do projects elsewhere. Um, so again, you don't have it in your standards. They're meeting that standard, that minimum standard. So why would they want, again, it's business. Again, think of it, it's business. Why would they want to spend more money on something when you're not requiring them to? So again, again, the buck's going to be passed on the consumer. So, we have to think about what's the balance in all this, too. Um, but certainly we've seen that there's an expectation. It's like the McDonald's of old days. You know, unless you require it, but they're going to say no, but we've seen it. If you require it and they want to be in your community, they're going to meet your standards. Um, so I think that as a planning commissioner myself, I've often said no. Uh, because our plan said this and this is what the applicant wants. have the backbone to say no, but also make sure you're prescriptive and also you identify what your expectations are for these types of projects. Um, so again, Amble Brook just right up the road. Has any I know Commissioner Krebs, you're quite familiar with Amblebrook. Um, has anybody else been in Amblebrook up in Gettysburg? Strawband Township just right off of 15. Uh, right up right up 97. You hang a
right on 15 and go up there at Gettysburg. Uh, great project, brand new. Um, it does offer um, Yep. stuff is moving through it. Um, it does offer a ton of amenities. Um, but also too, if you look at the next slide, um, it's a diverse landscape of housing types. So, not just one product is in there. There's a variety and options for choice. Um, go to this slide there next, Seth. And you can see it also includes a clubhouse. So, again, much larger scale. Um, but again, that's where I think the PUD, for example, can help scale these projects and making sure that you're considering types of amenities that would make sense to a certain product based upon that scale. Uh, Bloomfields at Frederick's, I'm Bloomfields at Frederick, right up the road from you all. I'm sure you've seen that driving along 15. Uh, there just north of the city. Um, but again, another great project. Uh, very large, very diverse as well, but there's some kind of common threads through that too. a diversity of product and it meets all those design standards, requirements, etc. uh through that process um as specified in the county uh code. Um and then um you can see again a number of amenities. Again, these don't have to have outdoor pools. We're not saying that all these projects have to have these high-end amenities, but think about the basic amenities. If you were going to live there and retire there, you know, what would you want to see? you know, what were the minimum kind of things that you wanted to see if you're because you're not paying cheap prices for any of this stuff. Uh I mean, these are half million, quarter of a million. It's amazing what the costs are. So, if you're paying for that and then you are complaining that I don't have access, my friends and family can't visit because they can't park. Um I can't get my walker out because now I have a a knee surgery I had to have done. Think about those things if you were in those shoes, but also what kinds of amenities you would like to have in your communities. Uh, a few other ones that we p pointed out. Transitions of America is very much a national builder in this
space. Uh, Litz project again they abide by the uh uh the local uh development codes there that also included architectural design standards uh and other requirements uh that they met. also a mix of housing. Uh for example, for the Lidditz project, minimum of 70% single family, maximum 30% duplex. Again, requiring a mix and I think that's some things that we want to see uh in these projects. Um amenities also, this one happens to be within the community of Litz. So there's even immediate access to a hospital. So you think about the medical care and other types of facilities. Again, you can't specifically dictate uh the properties that these goes on relative to within the zoning district that are permitted for, but these are also kinds of things that the developers are looking for in terms of where they're placing and what types of services. And then finally, a couple examples on retirement homes. Again, these are the multi-story apartment style living. Uh but again, the examples that we offer definitely show that there are amenities within uh that build environment. uh attractively designed um and again an area where um provides those types of amenities that I think that that the consumers are definitely wanting and also getting their money's worth um out of as well. So let me just go down to the policy recommendations then too and I'll have Seth join in uh on this. Um so again the purpose of the recommendations right now these are just high level policy recommendations. what we're, as Dafany said, what we're looking for you folks um commissioners is to give us direction like, yeah, we agree on these or we may not disagree totally on this, but give us kind of the the north guiding star of how do we proceed because what we would do next for this particular category of uses is put pen to paper on particular amendments like literally what are the changes that we would recommend in your codes to actually accommodate
these policy recommendations. Uh, so for number one, um, just go down to Sorry, Seth. So, I'll I'll take the first one. I'll hand it off to Seth. You can start going through these. Um, maybe think about, you know, instead of having the uses scattered differently in the ordinance. You know, you have your definitions where it has everything, but then you have to start finding where all the use regulations are. So one example is if you think uh uh uh Nell's Acres, the community's expectation was that was zoned R20 20,000. Um so they're thinking in their mind that's medium density residential and then the product comes out it's more higher density, right? 3.5 units per acre if you will. And how did we get there? Well, they use the age uh like the uh age restricted community provisions of the code which is somewhere else in the code. So on the surface, the average person is looking at your code and saying R20 and then going and saying, "Okay, now we're going to apply this different section and all of a sudden we're now able to increase our density." And that might be one where the community's expectations are just met because in their mind it was R20 and somehow we ended up with something with higher densities. That's fine because you provided for it. But again, making sure maybe there's an opportunity because that provisions applies to age restricted, maybe consolidate those types of requirements uh in an age restricted category. Uh uh so that everything's in a not saying everything's in a nice tidy neat place, but also helps make sure that you're not searching and hunting where these provisions are in the code. Um if you will. Seth, do you want to take the next one? Yeah, sure. Uh morning everyone. I just want to introduce myself real quick before I jump into the kind of our second recommended action. Uh my name is Seth Coons. I am a senior community planner with Michael Baker out of our Pittsburgh office. Uh it's my first time working directly in Carroll County, but I actually began my planning career down in Charles County, Loa, Maryland. They hired me right out of school. Grew up in the Midwest. Um so I'm familiar with Maryland. It is great to be back in the state and I want to
thank you all for your time this morning. Uh one other recommendation that we are proposing as part of this project is a more structured density framework as part of both the age restricted housing for retirement homes and retirement villages. um what is currently happening now in the county zoning and subdivision regulations um does a average density that is a little bit more uh flexible and difficult to to kind of nail down. So uh we want to replace that open-ended density determination um with averages that are based on um ranges within the zoning districts that are clearly established and identified just to make it easier from both the administrative review and application process. Um, this could also include things like density bonuses, um, that allow for an increase in the underlying density allowance based on, um, additional community facilities, uh, recreation areas, those types of things. Um, and also establishing some kind of more general broader, uh, regulations in terms of like minimum tract acre for some larger projects like retirement homes and retirement villages of certain scale. Keep going. Uh in addition to kind of rolling with that uh that density framework, reassessing density calculations um could be a valuable tool to help kind of guiding and crafting some of the development we think we'd like to see. um in terms such as like calculating density as an average units in terms of the number of acres um and replacing uh that uniform maximum application across the entire site um with something that is more again easier to implement uh apply for and uh work with through the approval process. Um the county's current regulations talk about net development acre area um that should be clearly defined more clearly to help work through this process some more. It's a very kind of technical underlying portion of the ordinances, but it does play a heavy role into how these projects come to fruition. Um, we can also allow for the clustering of development uh throughout the site to allow for
uh the preservation of critical open areas or you know set aside spaces for community areas. Uh these density calculations can definitely help uh craft that type of projects that we're looking for. Yeah. And if I could just highlight one important part about this is gross versus net. So right now your ordinance is require when a developer is required to have open space. It's calculated on the gross. So what ends up happening then you're allowing that applicant then to take advantage of areas that you think about open space. We want to use that maybe for active or passive recreation but too often you know again no requirement. So why are we're just going to take some of the I won't say wasteland but the areas that you couldn't develop and yield product out of that's part of your open space calculation. So what we would suggest and recommend and we see this a lot and we've helped other communities correct that problem use net. So you you you're first subtracting out uh the undevelopable areas the environmental sensitive areas flood planes etc wetlands what have you all important environmental features but again at the end of the day we want them to say okay you still have to provide for open space. So once you remove all that from the gross now you have a de net net developable area and use that net developable area to start to say okay now now start to use your open space calculations. The key to this though is too you also have to have flexibility in your zoning because you're asking the developer to say hey I have to get you you prescribed a specific average density for me now I can't get it because and I can't make my project pencil out. So what we've seen too is allow flexibility where those those lot sizes are able to actually contract, get smaller, so they're actually getting the yield that they need out of it to make their project work. Again, it's economics. They have to make it work pencil-wise. So we have to think about their end of it, too, in terms of the applicant, but also the consumer of what they're getting out of these projects. So sorry, sine. Thank you, Troy. Uh, so this is something that we talked about kind of initially as part of Troy's introduction to this whole project. uh in terms of what we saw in our site tour, what we see in some of our guiding documents, but also really what we uncovered throughout our best
practice analysis. Uh contextsensitive design standards get away from that underlying technical part of density calculations and net versus gross uh and really get into more of the things that we see uh when the projects are built out and we see in the long-term lifespan of projects. Um some of the things that we have compl contemplated and put forth today um such as like requiring height and massing transitions for large-scale retirement homes. So getting away from blank facades uh singular long uh roof lines that kind of be pretty ominous um against its context. Um placing some of our larger buildings as part of a campus style development more internal to the site. Putting our smaller more context uh sensitive uh buildings along the perimeter up against its context. um potentially increasing our buffering requirements around large projects near residential areas of much lower density and scale provide that nice transition um and then improving per the building and pedestrian circulation requirements both within and outside of sites where it's available um to ensure that as Troy had mentioned earlier we're not only requiring those community amenities but setting aside spaces where we can have an active lifestyle and some of the connections throughout the community um and a well-designed project is Winterford Manor. You know, if you think it's older, but it's really nice. Uh it's tucked back in. Uh it's in the contextsensitive design. Tall buildings in the middle. We've got some of the duplexes around the perimeter. It's got good pedestrian circulation. You've got some good examples already just in that project. And again, it's older. It's not something new. It's an older product, but still relative and very uh serviceable in terms of it's meeting these types of standards. And these regulations not only make projects better, but they preserve the compatibility with the surrounding community. uh and preserve some of that character what we have today um without being overly uh ownorous on those areas. Um going more thinking external to more internal uh some of the things that we
talked about earlier about aging in place and universal design standards within structures. Um, we have taken some example examples from within Maryland uh about providing some stepfree access into our units to allow for residents that are aging in place to not have that be an impediment for them to stay in this house for a long time. Uh, ensuring that our pedestrian routes throughout the site and within buildings are fully ADA accessible. Um, that's something we we always shoot for, but making sure that we're really hitting that hard as part of these types of developments. Um and then making sure that mobility is something that we're accounting for um within units at all times uh to again ensure that you know people don't feel like as they get older and you know mobility becomes more difficult that they have to leave these areas that they it's going to age with them. Uh the approval process is something else that we've talked and touched on today. um you know, we do have a conditional use process for for some of these um as it exists today, but uh maybe considering making that a little bit more objective and providing more clear criteria for what that process looks like. Um as Troy had mentioned earlier, we do have the planned unit development PUD process on the books in Carroll County today. Um and it could help us allow for some of that flexibility in site design, bulkan area standards, those types of things that we've already talked about. Um so it it's a tool we can use now. uh would just require a more clear connection uh with the PUD and these age restricted housing criteria. Um part of this could include uh requiring like a community amenities package which clearly lays out some of those community facilities that are being provided as part of a project. Uh internal pedestrian circulation plans that again show some of those other requirements put into place and multiple different avenues of ensuring that we're meeting all our requirements. um such as like a two-way access or a circulation plan that's a little bit more clear and prescribed for emergency access. Troy had mentioned when we were uh driving through Nell's Acres, uh even kind
of on an off- peak time, it was pretty obvious that parking design was going to be an issue was an issue there. Uh it was confirmed to us uh through some of our uh conversations and research. Um so parking design and minimum standards are something we've considered looking at as well. um making sure that we're providing not only adequate onu uh off- streetet parking for houses, but ensuring that our design standards for streets uh can allow for some adequate on- street parking, but also uh clearly requiring some off- streetet guest parking areas that are kind of, you know, easily distributed throughout developments to make sure that people are visiting houses, have places to park, and they're not taking over the streets and making things too difficult uh for existing residents or others that are driving through these developments. And then uh something else we had mentioned earlier a minimum housing type mix. So um establishing a a pretty basic standard of we want to see a range of housing units throughout these projects mostly retirement villages. Uh so setting a minimum standard for uh duplexes, town houses or or quads uh in conjunction with single family detached. You know there's a there's a variety of different ways that this is done. Different levels that different communities have gone in it. Uh some are much more restrictive. Some are a little bit more flexible. Um but you know certainly we think as we projects grow in scale and size uh we would like to see some of that uh variety of housing units and requiring this pretty basic standard condition and your pud already does that. So again it's only for R7 R10,000 or R7500. So your your PUD already includes this type of provision. So again if we think about applying the PUD to retirement homes villages types projects you could easily just you know that would be a very simple but also logical type of code amendment that you already use it. So it's not introducing something foreign, if you will. Um, I had talked about a community amenity plan as part of the approval process recommendation, but revising what those requirements are. Uh, providing some clear guidance on the types of community amenities we
would like to see as part of these projects. But again, revising the standards for uh the minimum size of those areas when they're triggered into effect. um certain, you know, types of projects, whether that be villages or homes, um require a certain scale of community areas. And then clearly saying in there that they need to be accessible, but um also, you know, functional and useful. Um not, you know, small green areas that are just randomly distributed throughout uh a large site or a retirement village that aren't necessarily all that useful or accessible for the residents. And then another one be looking at our open space calculations. Um kind of goes back to what Troy was talking about net versus gross. Um looking at what our underlying open space standards should be for mostly retirement villages but also retirement homes. Um and so looking at should we be somewhere in the realm of like 25% of our net developable area should be set aside as um conser preserved open space um in conjunction to those community amenities. Uh, and I believe this might be the last one. Emergency access standards as Troy talked about earlier. Very important. Looking at uh NFPA or fire code standards that require at minimum, you know, two-way access um or, you know, internal circulation throughout the site. Um, ensuring that we're not pro being overly obstructive and making sure that it's clear that fire apparatuses and emergency vehicles have good access in and throughout these projects. Not the last one, uh, sidewalk and pedestrian standards. uh you know a lot of these are are in interrelated uh so I won't hammer this too hard but again really making sure that our pedestrian standards are clear consistent and effective uh about achieving all of our goals and objectives with these projects. Then just wrapping up again as we talked uh we'll take your questions and comments and then uh then look for some direction from you of how we would proceed of uh possibly making these uh doing the text amendments
in terms of walking that through the process drafting those amendments and then that would go through the the normal procedures for enactment um if you will. So do you have anything to wrap up with? Okay. No. Well, let me say thank you to all of you for the incredible work and the amount of time that went into this. Um, I know that this is certainly a lot. Um, and I know that, you know, we're certainly always looking for areas that we can improve. And so I'm very grateful that that, you know, all of you u set to work on this. Uh, so I I'm certainly going to open it up to my colleagues for discussion. And if I uh may start with just one small question of my own. Uh, back on the slide about emergency access standards. Um, and I know my colleagues have all uh gone through the report and gone through the uh uh presentation. Um but the emergency access uh standards. So I know that a lot of the report and the presentation dealt with uh things like roads, but are you also taking into account uh emergency access to each unit from the front and the rear? That is if a you know fire engine has to pull up or an ambulance has to pull up. Uh you an EMT has the ability to to get around to the back of a unit in case of a of an emergency. There's a snow drift or or you know there's some kind of obstruction out front. Yeah. If you uh actually in the report um the the doc the report document goes into pretty good detail and actually cites the specific standards that that addresses that commissioner in terms of you know again again the the that's the standard that's what all you know fire you know response agencies are evaluating not just hydrant location if you will but also that addresses access rear access etc uh to buildings. can they actually tackle, you know, attack that fire, if you will, and get, you know, not just maybe apparatus, but hose. So, again, it's it's making sure that that's clear. Again, not to saying that you aren't abiding by it, but it just sometimes I just want to make sure that we're having clear standards. You already codified some of the NFPA standards elsewhere. I've seen this might be a good opportunity just to reiterate those in your code to reference
that those are what we are expecting when we have these communities being designed. Thank you very much. I just wanted to make sure because from my reading I just wasn't quite clear that that but I'm glad that it is the case. So, thank you. Yeah, the PowerPoint just summarized it, but if actually on page uh 15 of the report um emergency service access truly does site uh the NFP1 fire code access road location requirements, access road specifications, obstructions, and then it also references uh how your county code uh talks about uh some of these requirements for access and fire protection um as well. So, um, yeah, the bottom line is what the code says is what we should be making sure that those are, um, we're elevating those to a level of importance from a design standpoint. Thank you very much, my colleagues. Um, I've got several questions. Um, I understand aging in place. I don't understand why it would be a requirement. People People move every five years. people people want over 55, but they don't want aging in place. They want over 55. Many of them still work. Um I'm a hair over 55. I don't want any of that. Um I live in a three-story farmhouse. Um so, uh many move. Nell's acres I think met all the fire requirements when it was approved. Um, and uh, I respect your opinion, but many communities, 90% of the communities, particularly high-end communities, you couldn't get to their backyard with a golf cart if you and had a and had a gun. My daughter's has a retaining wall on one side and a shared access with her neighbor on the other side that you probably could have get a golf cart through, but you can't get a
fire truck through. And that's okay. That meets the law. That meets the standards. I I I I hate to see us get too excessive with uh standards. And again, uh one of my other comments is uh landowner rights. Again, my house, it's been there since 1854. Nicely put. Um I don't care what Manchester thinks about it. um they can buy it or not buy it, but um it it's I should have the right to have the house I want. Um and I'm curious, Nell's Acres, did you get many complaints from anybody there? I know every house built there was sold before it was completed. And and I think uh they knew how long their driveway was. They knew how wide the road was. Um and they're happy. So, I get to tell them they're unhappy. Yeah. So, a lot of questions there, Commissioner. I'll try to go back. So, so in terms of retirement, and I got a lot more, but if I may, I didn't I thought you might have been finished there, Commissioner. No, no, good. So, so re re retirement or aging in place, if you will. Again, my my mom and dad are near 80. Uh they've lived in their uh 1976 ranch home since they've done, and my dad still uh does sawmilling. there would be no way my dad would go into to a that's not his style. He's like you farm boy. Um you know country living loves it. But again people want those types of products. They want to move maybe out of congested urban areas go to a place. So again there's a there's a consumer market choice for those products. And what we're seeing in the industry is that um they want to they've made they this is their next retirement. This is probably where they want to try to least live for out their aging years. Again, the whole idea is that, you know, you're not providing continuing care, but you're actually providing choices and options for them as they maybe say, "Hey, I bought this single family two devel um when I first
retired at 55. Um now I'm probably near 6570 and I thought I don't need all this space. I'm I I don't want to do all this." So again, having the options first and foremost is is important. Um in terms of uh uh Nell's acres, we're not saying that's a in terms of people are unhappy. It's quite frankly probably one of your few uh retirement villages in the county. Uh and I think what we're getting at is, you know, if you look around otherware, you you might potentially losing market share. People that want to stay or move to Carol County because of the rural environment that you have, good quality of life. Um that's really kind of one of the minimal products that you have. So again, it's not to say that they're unhappy because they bought it. It's like almost fully built out, right? But if given other choices, if you had choices to choose from, if you're spending that type of money, where would you want to spend it? I think we're also trying to think about the consumer. Are you getting, you know, are you getting, you've got choices elsewhere, right up the road in Frederick, right up the road in Gettysburg. Um, that's competition in your backyard. Um, so again, depends if you move to Pennsylvania and want to have your retirement not taxed. Um, hallelujah. Um, or if you want to stay in in Maryland and and but go to Bloomfield, you've got competition. So again, it's not saying that's a bad product. If you just compare it to other relative type of products, you could start to say and on the fire access, absolutely, we're not saying it doesn't meet fire code. It's just one where um as long as you're fire chief, they're satisfied with it. It does meet code, but again, thinking about um it's pretty tight spaces. I'm sure they can get apparatus to fight it. Whether they have a ladder truck or not, um I don't know. But it's just making sure as a planning commissioner myself, we always look at those things. Can you actually It doesn't mean you have to get a a truck behind there, but can you get the hose? Is it accessible? Is it easy to get through there? Or do we have all this storm water? I mean, this is encumbered by storm water. I mean, the last thing we want is a serious flooding issue like we had last year. I mean, uh, I had nine inches of water in my basement after that one
hurricane. If the fire company had to come, I'm not their priority. Um, but again, if you're if you're thinking about where they're putting open space and storm water basins and backyards, that's a problem number one. And number two is if it's a flooding event, you got a fire going on and they can't get to the back there because it's flooded. It doesn't matter if it's if a truck or a walking, they're you're that that place is burning down. Um, and property rights absolutely. You know, not saying that you care, but again, it's consumer choice. It's also how you are giving uh the best and and the best product that you can provide within re reason in Carol County because again it's competition. Uh you want you somebody made the comment about living here, working here, etc. is very important. This is where you grew up. This is where you want to stay. So let's make sure that we don't lose them to Gettysburg or Frederick or some other area because they've got maybe products that are meeting their needs. Plus the demand's there, right? So again, it's already built out in El's acres probably pretty full. There's more demand coming down the road. So it's it's it's also to looking at those projects and say, "Hey, what would we do differently?" And I agree. But do we want to require that they can't be different? It's all in the balance. I want to give an example. Plum Creek in Hanover, which is pretty close. Yep. Um nobody wants a Well, I I'll get the lot size. Uh a halfacre lot. Uh not too many seniors want uh not too many young people want. They don't want the maintenance. Yeah. And but Plum Creek, you're in a cottage. A lot of them are duplexes, pretty small, you're in that. If you need different accessibility, you move. And if you need the nursing home care, you move, right? And and it's all in the same community, which I think
is a great choice. But very few people buy at 55, 60 the house they want to die in. They buy something for their age now. And some of them go to these communities where they can get more care. Some don't. And and yeah, like you you talked about parents. My mother lived in a two-story house until she was 92. And and uh she wanted to be home. she didn't want to be someplace else. Um, lot size. Um, and and I agree with open spaces. Now, for recreation, what people want by far is walking paths. They can be around a stormwater management pond. They can be in a slightly rougher area. And and and I have no problem with that. I can't imagine too many 60 year olds want a soccer field. Um and they definitely don't want the local rec council playing in their community. Um walks are a big issue. Um 36 inch is allowed. You you were saying up on 50% or more. My gosh, does that cost money in storm drains, storm water management. Um which which all goes to the price of the house. So you've now made the house unaffordable. Um, there's nothing wrong with 36 inch walks. Now, certain areas maybe you should have some wider walks, but to say I want all you guys say 65 foot wide. Yeah. And that's that's ridiculous as far as storm water management storm drains. Same thing with making the streets wider. I've heard comments, oh, changing from a 22 foot wide street to 30 doesn't affect storm drain. Well, if if you've ever built
those or you've ever developed lots, my gosh, it it jacks the cost where um and and there's two issues. Uh as a developer, I'm going to press all that onto the lot. If the market doesn't allow that, I I'm not going to do it. I'm going to go to another county. Um Frederick County made some changes and saw very little development in in that. I love what you talked about PUDS. We we you know again Frederick County was awesome with that, but and you talked about some R7500, R10,000. Um that's lot sizes that seniors want. Not not R20 and definitely not R40. And they don't care if the community ms the grass or not. They just don't want it. And and if you have a halfacre lot, you don't need a community center. You don't need a pool. You can put the one behind your house. Got your open space in your backyard. Exactly. So So there's nothing wrong with smaller lots and and even our normal clustering. Um my humble opinion, we should we should look at maybe three per acre at at the at the max, not not R20. But that's that's a whole another subject. So that's that's kind of Yeah. And if I could just address on the rambling. Yeah. No, those are great comments, Commissioner on the on the sidewalk five foot. You know, one thing that we look at is, you know, ADA requirements now every so often you have to have where wheelchair passibility it's 5T and do that. I think one thing I think about in my own neighborhood and I see it all the time. Um, how many people walk on a 36 inch sidewalk? Nobody. Everybody walks in the road. So, if you're thinking about myself included, you can't walk to a breast on a 36 unless you're, you know, uh, your your two children walking on there. It's very difficult to try to actually walk together. Again,
I I want to contradict that. The area we used to be in actually town of Manchester allowed blacktop sidewalks 36 in. So, again, I saw a lot of people walking their dogs with a glass of wine. Um, and they were fine with those 36. I think it's just more about what I what we've seen. Well, it depends on traffic. If Exactly. I'm walking the street, too. And I think part of it is in in a in a retirement type community. The safety part of it is make sure that the accommodations are on the sidewalk to encourage people to use the sidewalks. So again, that's where even my township, we went to all five foot sidewalks because you're going to require five foot at some point. Yeah, it's a cost. We know that it's more storm water, but storm water requirements is you must provide for it on site. Nothing. It's it's pre-development versus post-development. So, we get it, but we made a decision for walkability and accessibility. A half mile from you, they might have 36. Well, or there's no sidewalk. There's a sidewalk to nowhere sometimes, right, Commissioner T? So, again, it there's a lot of, you know, a lot to unpack there in terms of requirements. And again, I think the the the the PUD you can start to see it gives you the flexibility. And I think you made a great point um with respect to the 7500 and R10,000. I mean, why not have the these types of projects, retirement villages, retirement communities um involved in that PUD process because a lot of these design standards could be instead of being very specific and in particular, you could actually have the flexibility in that PUD process to get the project out that actually is more suitable to the property to the to the landowner, etc. That's where I think that that flexibility is so much better on both sides uh of the coin in terms of these uh applications coming through. And I want us I want us always looking at these details, but but I just I I don't want to see us require developers out of Carroll County and that's happened in other counties and and I've
seen it and and there's a reason. Um I did 3,000 lots in Frederick County. I think I did four in Carol County and they weren't too bad to deal with, but but yeah, it's definitely striking chose to do where we where we had le I think the other part of it is, you know, you've got great planning and zoning commission members that are volunteers. They're all over the from the county in different parts and you know, as volunteers go, they're subject matter experts by day and then they come to the meetings and then this is their volunteer job. They may or may not be like Seth and I who are certified planners, if you will, trained like Daphne and Chris are. We do this every day. So, this comes natural. You know, you're expecting those volunteers to understand these projects. Some do, some don't. And back to Pennsylvania, most of your town managers are farmers. Yeah. They're not professional land planners and and and they can make very good decisions as our planning commission and our BCA has made very good decisions. I don't always agree with them. But I that where I was going at is making sure they've got standards at least in the ordinance to say this is what we're evaluating. What's our evaluations based upon? What they should be based upon? And these are some of the design principles, criteria, if you will, that they could say, "Hey, going through this, have you considered this piece? Have you considered this?" And then the PUD then gives you the opportunity again that flexibility to either wish or don't wish that we impose that type of standard on this type of project. And thank you guys. And uh um and I'm not buttering you up. It's too late. You you look better in person than I Well, we all do. The camera definitely does doesn't do justice, right, Commissioner? So, thank you. I'm done. Any other comments or questions from my colleagues? You guys go first. I'll finish. Tom, Mike, anything off the top of your head? Go ahead, Commissioner Krabs, if you'd like to. I just want
to hear from you guys. You've heard from me so much. No, I appreciate your um all your work on this and everything you said um is what I've been I feel the same way and this most of this is in my district. I can tell you that the people in my district want this product. They're moving out of my count out of my area a lot and they're moving out of state, but they're also moving to Frederick and they're moving to Pennsylvania to these very products and that's why I know about them because I've gone to see them and I um cry when I see them. They don't want to leave. They want to stay where their families are and they want to and there's other places in the county. We have them up at really nice. We have some other products um up in Tonytown. Um excuse me, Carol Vista. Carol Vista, which is an older product, but and they're having parking problem. They're having road problems now because the widths are not as wide as they wish they are, but you can't make them wider. But um the functionality, as you mentioned in Nell's Acres, uh what the only thing you said incorrectly in the whole thingres it was R4,000. Oh, I'm sorry. Thank you. or 40,000. Now, I threw that in there just to see if you would were paying attention. The only thing I that's the only thing I thought you did a good job. My apologies and thank you for correcting the record on that. The only there's a couple things that um might be unique to Carol County. I I mean, I think your presentation was great. I think these things need to be put into code and for not only the reason of predictability for the developer, predictability for the community and getting a better product and having more marketable project and for people. I think this is going to be a huge demand. I was up in Frederick a few weeks ago. It was unbelievable how many people were looking at these open houses. They're selling by the week they're selling five and six a week because it's such a great product. Now it's a lot bigger property. Um, very nicely done. I happen to have a home in one of the communities that the same developer is doing. That's phenomenal. It's not over 55, but they're people want the they they're on smaller lots obviously because they don't want to take care of things. It's maintained by the community association. Maintenancefree is a big we
don't mention that, but maintenancefree obviously is something comes with this because as we age, I know some people like to cut the grass into old age, but some people don't want to fool with it. I've never met the I'm getting there, commissioners. But but um the couple things that we need to look at you keep me me talking about the conditional uses. I don't know exactly how it works but the standard in our county and it's a legal standard or something that usually is applied from what I understand is is it make is it worse off in this spot versus some other spot and that's it. They don't come in and put all these other um they're not looking at it in a technical way like the planning commission would. And I'm not familiar with the PUD uh concept and how exactly that would work. I still think the more more expectations that you have up front, the very same developers, the very same builders are building in Amberbrook that would come and do it here, but they're they're putting not the product here. And um and they have the designs, they have they're doing them there. They're beautiful. It's a beautiful community. So, the product is there. It's just they're going to build the least possible because it is there. It's it's a building to the standard. Building to the standard in the ordinance and and you know, I think we can have higher standards here in Carol County because we're a great place to live and I think everyone will benefit from that. It doesn't affect the price people say it does. These products that are are meaning the minimum standard are still selling for $750,000. So, that a high price and those same price is at these other places that have the higher standard. So that's the market that I'm seeing cuz I've been to them on I have all the brochures. So they seem to be not a lot difference in the prices. That's the market you're competing in, right? It's a market we're competing in. So you know some of it is what's really happening based what what could happen. So the one issue on the conditional use we just maybe the attorney um Tim can help with what our standards are and why they are if it would be different. But Nell's acres went through the conditional use process and their standard was is it worse off here than somewhere else? Yet they were never told that it was happening at a failing intersection because that wasn't part of
their I don't know. I'm just saying that did not stop it from being built even and it's still at a failing intersection. It's still the intersection is still not solved. So those issues did not get caught for whatever reason when it got to the through the conditional use process. So that is um something that we just got to figure out. Also in the state the legislature just passed and I'm talking to Chris back there. The legislature just passed one of the governor's bills is to expedite the planning process. And I'm not um arguing with the fact that it shouldn't take five years to get plans through a process. Um but there is some happy medium. I think they made it like six months after to a complete application. I don't remember. I got to read the bill. 30 days. Well, whatever it is, whatever it is, it's a standard. I don't know how it's going to be met, but it's going to mean more than ever for everything that we do that everybody knows upfront what what the expectations are. And they should know upfront here's what you know, here's what we'd like to have. Here's what you need to have. Um but even more than ever for everything we do, we've got to make sure otherwise it's going to get approved and we're going to end up with a mess because we don't have clear standards on many things. So, um while we're talking about this stuff, I think we should I haven't read the bill yet. I just saw the synopsis of it, but I was going to bring it up later. Um, the effect of this bill on our total plan approval process in the future to make sure we all know here's what you need to do because I don't know what a complete application looks like. Um, but we want to make it better for all parties, even the development community. They time is money for them. So, the more they hold on to a piece of property, the more it's going to raise their holding cost and the more they got to pass that along. So, it's it's, you know, I I definitely am committed to that to that piece of it. So um that and also we we had talked about product type. It didn't come up enough but the whole first floor living issue is huge for people. You know when you have a threetory building and you your square footage is based
on a third a third and a third. As you age you can't use those two/3s. It's hard. It's tougher. Most of these products the majority of the uh it's either they're two stories. So you have optional finished basement or optional finished upstairs or they're one level most of them. And that's what I want to make sure that the square footage over you mentioned Wifford Manor the square it's all one floor. Uh the condos are on one floor. So having the majority of the space um or enough living area uh on a single level. You mentioned your mother lives in a a somebody did in a rancher. That's why they can stay there. My mother's 92 and she lives in a two big two-story house. She can't do the steps, but thank goodness they moved from a rancher 30 years ago and they put a first floor bedroom at first floor so she can still live there. But many people that's been their their problem and they don't move. People don't want to move twice. Moving is very very challenging. You want to move once. You want to make a move. And I said that 20 years ago to my wife, I'm not moving again unless the good Lord makes me do it. But you want to make that one downsize. I I believe the people that I come in contact with and I've been I am older than you are and I have do hang out at the senior center with these seniors who talk to me all the time about this and um in my community this is what they're looking for. So the commissional use piece is a thing. Also I've read a bunch of ordinances from other counties um and mo everyone that I've read has something in the deed restriction. We don't have anything in our deed restriction at all for this for the um the properties to make sure because that becomes a problem later if people stop doing it. It it can't be controlled by the homeowner association because then if they don't control we lose we a lot of these projects are happening because of schools or and because you get extra density by doing this even though you have to give nothing in return. So um if there's got to be something that makes them stay that way. Yeah. I I know we talked about that before and I we might have been remiss in because it's a small detail but it's an important detail. I didn't I mean I missed I
read this last night. This is good because um you know again you want to make sure and we we again I just use my example where's oftentimes we we as a condition of approval we'll make a recommendation that hey you need to make sure that that's placed in the deed not only on the site plan for approval but also on the in the deed that's recorded for the property. And then even sometimes too we make sure that you know when people are consumers are buying you it's a notification. So there's a lot of tools but yeah the deed restriction tying it back to make sure that it's like now you can't it's it's 55 plus that's what it is that's what it should be and it needs and it was in every code that I read I read Frederick I wrote even our towns had the restriction we did we don't have it in our code so make sure it's required in our code. I'm not sure if we make them do it. I don't think we do but if it's in if it's in there we they h it has to be done. Um what was the other things conditional and the pud process I don't know how many we've done the first when I first moved to Carol County 40 some years ago I moved into they told me at the time the first pud it was in Carol town it was starter homes it was very nicely done but I don't know exactly how our pud process works and if we use it but but we need to make sure those requirements are the whole part that's difficult for us is the scalability because obviously if you got a thousand houses you can do a lot more than you can do with 30 houses. So, we got to be reasonable with that. And I'm not sure how they do it with the smaller um you know, 200. Right now, your putt, I think, correct me, Daffany and Chris, I think it's 20 acres is the minimum track size that that you can start out with. So, again, um um you know, smaller projects less than that, you know, then it it's a different animal. You know, you've got such a small area to work with to begin with. So again, you want to make sure and I think the 20 acres is a standard that I've seen elsewhere um be applied in terms of the the entry point of when the it could trigger a PUD type of use, right? And and we didn't visit this one project, which is a small one, but there's an area that's right in the middle of the community and they just took the the property and it's not very big and they just said we're going to call it over 55 and they just put a bunch of town houses in
there. And so even though it's over 55, it's a small, it might be 20 houses, 20, I'm not sure, but just by calling it over 55, they got all the extra density, but nothing came with it, right? And so that one we didn't really point out, but it's and I know it's not 20 acres, but it literally was a piece of property in the middle of a neighbor. It's a higher density neighborhood, but they just jammed a whole bunch of stuff in there with with not enough I don't think there's enough parking either. Um, so the conditional use piece, the just understanding what we have in place. And then the one of the issues we've had is the site plan versus subdivision plan. I I was reading state law the other day. I started looking up the code and it was 700 pages long. I read up to page 400. And in state code, it says we have to have 30 foot wide roads. And so I'm not sure um like at Nell's Acres, it says right in the plan, you may not have parking on these roads. Well, it's unrealistic to say you can't park. People are going to have to have a place to park. They're not they can't just park in their driveway in their garage and have visitors. There's not enough space. But it's it said it in the in in their in the documents. You may not have parking. You can't have parking. But we can't require parking signs. We can't require lines. We can't require enforcability. So people do park and then the then they can't get down. Then it's not wide enough. That's why they're parking on the sidewalks because it's not required and there's no enforcability. And how does your friend that's come to visit know that there's no parking? How do you know that there's no parking? It says it in this report that was So that's part of the problem. I don't know why I every place that I've looked at and talked to their site plan and sub subdivision plan are the same. Those requirements ours for some reason are different. So we need to make sure that they're treated the same because all of these will be site plans, right? Because they're one property. Yeah. Theoretically, I mean that's, you know, in terms of a site plan and then there's a subdivision plan. So yeah, it comes down to usually if it's one site going through the the development process, it's a site plan versus a whole subdivision. And and most of the and
I'm not storm water seems to be running the any any state requirements and federal requirements, but it seems like storm water is is um it seems to be a priority of everybody versus just you need to find a balance. Most of these developments, the ones that I've talked to the people, they they're putting them underground uh or they're doing them. It's not between all of these units. So, you know, making sure that we look at alternatives for the storm water and if they're going to put things close together, they might have to put them underground. And some of the good developers do that and they automatically do it. I'm not sure what the cost is, but at least it's not taking up the open space, the considered open spaces, not, you know, storm water swirls. Um, let's see what else here. Oh, in terms of the sidewalks, I I appreciate what you said about the sidewalks. Um, one of the first things that came to mind, one of our older retirement homes, um, it's Homeland. I rode in there to see it. I hadn't seen it in a long time. I rode down there. There was a lady in a wheelchair with her dog going down the middle of the street. And I had to wait for her to get down to the end of the street. And I'm like, why is she in the middle of the street? Well, the sidewalk was up against the building, three foot wide, and then the cars were so close to it that they were parked over the sidewalk and you couldn't walk down the sidewalk. Well, this woman in a wheelchair had to walk in the middle of the street to take a walk. That made me angry that we allow that. And I showed Mr. Hind and he agreed with me. We We need to do better. These are our seniors. I care about them and we're going to make these products that we can be proud of. That building, mostly older women live there. It's a more affordable place. The sidewalk should have been wider and we should have had something called a verge. Do you know what a verge is? You know what a verge is? The new word that we learned. It's a little grass strip between the road and the sidewalk. And you have that because then if somebody goes over the sidewalk, then they're
into the grass. They're not onto the sidewalk. So, thank you for teaching me a new word instead of the little grass strip. And those little grass strips, some of them are like this. And nice developers make them wider. Um, and you can tell now when I go into development, I look immediately and I can say they're usable. Yeah, they're usable and that um that's where people walk their dogs. Also called the tree lawn, whatever. So um you know I agree with you that you can't two people can't walk down a three-foot sidewalk and that's why they do end up in the street. So I put the and and on these these communities that's what we want. We want people to be walking and talking. That's the whole point of doing it. So, I'm all in favor of doing you, they all doing five walks up, four to five foot sidewalks and making sure that the driveways are wide enough that you can open your car doors because you have to park in the driveway because there's nowhere to park on the street out acres that you can open your door without hitting the other car or open the door and still be on the on firm ground and not in the grass. when we had all the snow this winter. They are seniors and they should be able to stand on firm ground and they should also be able to stand on something that is not so tilted that some of these driveways are so tilted that they're on an angle that's not handicap accessessible needs to be flat. And again, we're talking about developments that um aging in place um gross versus I don't know if you want me to go through all this. I agreed with everything that you you talked about and just pointed out those those few things that we don't need to look into a little more carefully and I didn't know what um the one um issue we have now with the code and I I read everything you said our our code and and um master plan are written it's being the interpretation of what it says that's being applied that is the problem the interp I mean they A I've said this many times. It says clearly in the book, you know, on R20 what type of housing it should be. And on R40, it doesn't say anywhere you can deviate from that except in a chart somewhere else. There's a little letter everywhere. It's
very consistent with the housing for our current law. That interpretation has been changed. It says this is the use. Single family home is the use in R20. Doesn't say may be the use. It says is the use in the master plan. and it's been interpreted because it's this that it could be interpreted as something else and it doesn't say that anywhere and so that's what I I've you know tried to make clear because it in clear words here and here but somewhere there was a chart made and somebody put a C that the where zoning appeals could make it different I don't know how you can interpret the words into a chart that yeah and I we've talked about that one that goes back to the way the the county plan and the future land use description of residential medium and high residential medium does it it's it says uh single family detached is the use it ex says that then residential medium says is the predominant use so that the differentiation one thing I would I think at least my interpretation of that commissioner if you read further down in that description it does call out retirement 55 plus um so in my opinion my opinion um if you interpret that over to the zoning code the table the use table you're talking about single family detached dwelling is a per use permitted by right. So that's telling me that's the predominant use. But also that description back in the master plan calls out retirement homes etc 55 plus are also an appropriate use in that residential medium district. If you apply that over to the zoning code, then it provides for retirement uh villages, for example, and then it provides for different types of housing choices, but those are conditional uses only. Um, in the uh R, help me, Deafany. R 20 are um the cheap, sorry, a cheat. You're talking about the retirement villages. It's it's a commit a conditional use
two family dwelling in a retirement village. um conditional use in the R20 R20 R10 and R7500. So it allows for but by condition commissioner. So again the way I interpret it is when it says it is the use single family detached it's interpreted in the code as condition it's permitted by right there's no conditions on it. It does provide for in the definition for future land use retirement 55 plus. If you go to the zoning code, it provides for that use, but then it gives the different types of uh uh residential types. Two family dwellings or town houses uh could be actually a part of that retirement village, but those are by condition. So, Right. But they also says the word predominantly, and predominantly is not 100%. And it it really Yeah. And I I like to think about the plan the planning document is that 60,000 foot policy document that's here. And then there's enough flexibility there that when you write the zoning code, there is consistency. uh between the two in our opinion um the way we wrote our report. So again that's we've talked about that and I think that that's the way I would and you're right the next one residential high is in the definition of the future land use it's prescriptive um it comes out to me in terms of but that was all done uh numerous years ago if you will um I think the opportunity is to think about how do we then think about these types of products in the zoning code and we talk about the better product that we want to see design etc. That's what I think we have the ability to change. I just want to make sure the ones that are in progress get changed because that's all we have left. It's the only So, one of the um other questions scale alignment chart alignment process where conditional uses. Oh, the name um we c this is little but we call retirement homes. Not everybody's retired and everybody else call I'm not sure how we came up with it. It's a long long time ago. Most of them call it active age restricted or something like that. Just I I think it'd be nice to change the title because people are moving in at 55 and they're not retired. They might not be retire.
So it's just retirement used to be they used to be retirement homes for old people. Now this is a new thing. It is for age restricted people. We think of retirement homes as like a continuum continuum care. So I think it be a little more yeah it's a marketing thing. It's a marketing thing. I think a little upgraded. So come up with a y what there most of them are called active age restricted or whatever. um just marketing. That's a great point. And I'm not sure what the process is going to be in the future, but um I won't go on anymore because I think uh I think you covered a lot of it. Um the some of it is about the basing it on the underlying zoning and the land use. The reason we're we're not getting a variety. That's been my problem. We're not getting the variety of house. We're getting all the same thing. They're all 100% threetory town houses and they're small. They're they're narrow. They're small. Plus, we're not in the other pieces with the safe the safety issues, the road issues are very big. I've had so many fire people approach me. And it's not just about fire, it's about EMS. When you got rows of eight or seven houses and you can't get around to the back and you can't get through, um, you got to sometimes they're getting more and more calls from these a everybody's aging. Our fire department is getting way more EMS calls, not fire calls, but EMS calls. And so, we need to make sure that they are accessible if something's in the rear. Um, so that's uh they have been pointing coming to me thanking me for um helping with this because it's been they've been raising a red flag for years on it and we haven't changed the code. So I I appreciate that on the behalf of our volunteers and our new fire departments that we make it easier for them. Okay, thank you commissioner. So whatever the next process is, I will get more involved in the details, but you laid it I think you laid it out very well. Thank you very much. and the universal design. We talked about this last year in our work and a housing affordability work group. drafting will remember that and I know there's a whole bunch of things you can have and some are nice and some don't cost any more money and I mean there's something
called a peepphole and it's like okay maybe you should have a peep when you're older that and you don't think about that but hey you're living alone you're a woman living alone you want to see who's knocking at your door okay requiring it is no big deal you just don't think about it but hey um and there there are number of other things but Howard County took a balanced approach they they said these you must do and these we recommend you do or but but you wouldn't maybe think about them some of them is just a lever handle versus a doorork knob because when you're older sometimes you you need to push the lever and doesn't cost any more money. It's just another way of doing things. So, and there's a few examples, but as we walk through them, I would hope and suggest that we would um not just include the planning commission. I'd like to see us go to one of the senior centers, the senior center where these are and talk to people there and say, "What kinds of things? Here's the list. Here's the ideas. What do you think?" Because they're the people that are the that's your um audience. That's who's and then just get a feel from them what they believe in because um that's who I'm hearing from and that's what I'd like to and now that I'm getting there I understand their issue. So I just think that would be helpful reach a reach out on you get down to some of the details of what things are important. I know zero entry is very important. At Nell's Acres you have two steps. There's not even a rail you have to put it's aftermarket. They're all different. So I I think having that zero entry, everyone I went to has zero entry. It just means you have a little lip there and you can take a wheelchair over it or walk up into it. And I think most are doing that. So I thank you for your all of your work. I think you uh hit the nail on the head. We think like I appreciate you taking the tour and seeing you know seeing what we have in place. Yeah. Well, that's is our pleasure and uh we appreciate the opportunity to help and we want and the other thing is time is of the essence and I know we've said that all along. I'm sorry we're delayed this long. So, as much as we can expedite this. Yeah. That's why of the four categories, we we got direction from Chris and Daphne to say, "Make this one the top priority." That came from us. The board asked them to do that, too. We don't That's true. Yep. And Yep. They definitely they're
passing it through. No, they did. No, they did. And we appreciate that because we don't These are the ones that have active projects that we want to make sure they know what's the ex what the expectations are. The other ones don't have the as active as projects or as important. So, we appreciate anything we can do to facilitate that. Um, moving it along. And that's where our next step would be if we get your blessing and direction forward here. Do you need any more direction than do you need anything else from us? Do you have direction? Well, before we I'm sorry. Yeah. Before we get too far along in there, I know Commissioner Garren had one or two things he wanted to say. And then to follow up, if I may, something on that Commissioner Krebs said, I know it asked earlier about uh rear emergency access to the buildings, right? So, I went back and I read through the report again while we were sitting here and it talks about exterior doors, distances to roads, hose length, sprinkler systems, access roads, uh, but specifically uh, you know, when there's an emergency, what I'm I guess maybe I wasn't clear enough earlier and I apologize for that. Getting a physical body into the building to respond to something. And as Commissioner Krebs had alluded to, I've heard from numerous fire and EMS people that getting into a building specifically, not just being able to fight a fire from a distance is, you know, matters. Um, so I I just want to make sure again that that uh that's being taken into account that somebody can actually physically get into a building because if you have so many units together in a row, it's tough to get like if it's the middle house you have to respond to. You have to run around the entire building and get into the back and if there's no rear access road to it. Yeah. And that would be one where it comes down to where the building code. So again, zoning code versus building code um has those types of requirements and like like even like fire escapes and things like that, access to the actual building. Um but uh certainly we can do some more research on that through an FPA, but typically what you're finding here, what we've written out is relatable to the zoning or site development code in terms of the site layout and design versus the building fire code requirements um in terms of getting into the building itself. And I would
very much appreciate uh if you would look into that because again uh from firefighters and EMTs who have spoken to me uh you again if there is no you can't pull a vehicle up behind the building and they have to get to the back of the building. Um you know I've heard of a number of instances uh down in Commissioner Kreb's uh district where that is the case where you know that difficulty of getting to the rear impinges their efforts to provide emergency assistance. So thank you very much for that. Thank you. And you know, you just brought up an issue about the building code versus the zoning code. And I don't know how that works because some of it you don't see in the zoning. It actually is in the building code. And I I don't know what version we use. I don't even know where it is. But that is something I think we should make sure that that that building code that we're using is up to date. I mean, I don't never looked at it because some of that stuff is in that code. It depends on what I'm sure you've dropped the international building code and the international residential code. So yeah, it would be uh separate from what we're doing here, but it definitely would be one just to as the commissioner here talked about just, you know, use this opportunity to check that to make sure you've adopted the current standard. Yeah. And I don't know if it's easier on some of these things to put some of that. I don't know what the developers look at if they look at that that code and if everybody uses the same code or not. They Yeah, we try to not not mix and match building versus zoning. You know, you you want to keep the building code separate. How do we make sure as I the few places that I've talked to, even Westminster, they like with site plans and subdivision plans, they they have the same requirements. We don't. We have different requirements, and I'm not sure why. So, I want to make sure that, you know, if you need to have a road a certain width, it should be a certain width, whether it's in a site plan or subdivision plan. So, I don't know where that came from, but I I just want to and I've asked in in Frederick, it's the same. I think it's in Howard. They don't have a differentiation. I want to make sure that we clearly know that I don't care if it's a site plan, it has to be followed for those safety issues. It can't it's got to be the same. Understood. Thank you. For the retirement communities especially. Commissioner Garren, I know you had Yeah. Uh thank you. So, um I'm I'm pleased with what we're we're seeing here. the the
board understood that this was going to be a huge undertaking, which is why we took the approach we did with spending county taxpayer dollars to get a good consultant to help us work through these things because they are very important. Um, obviously for people who are listening, you they they need to understand that, you know, we do have eight municipalities within Carol County and these things do not apply to those municipalities. So the towns you live in make those decisions and sometimes they do a good job with them and sometimes they don't and then sometimes they have to go back and try to try to fix things. Um this this is not just about for me this is not just about doing better because we always need to be doing better. Um this is not just about sort of you know making sure we've got a good product. I mean we've all got our own personal experiences here. My both my parents are 80 years old and they were looking for something like this where they moved. They moved out of uh Delaware to North Carolina and these are the type of communities, neighborhoods that people want to move to. Do they need a pool and all these amenities? No. But they need something. They need a they want a you know central location where they can meet and do things. It's they do want some paths that are wide enough. And generally speaking, that's what that's what people are asking for. And that's pretty it's pretty standard stuff. Obviously, safety needs to be a factor as well, but it's this is also about the the county's economic viability going forward. I mean, these are the neighborhoods that people are wanting to move into these age restricted neighborhoods. People are not retiring at 55. And if they do, they are not just sitting around. I'm 57. It's, you know, hard for me to believe that sometimes I'm I'm qualified to move into one of these neighborhoods and no, nothing in my life's slowing down. That's right. So, this is about the county's economic viability moving forward. I mean, this is what people expect out of their elected officials at the county level, you know, looking forward to the future, and this
is the future. So, again, I I'm pleased. I I feel like we we made the right decision in going down this path because it's an enormous undertaking. Um and uh I'm I'm I'm ready to move forward with these recommendations. I think it's in the moving in the right direction for sure. Um and um I'm thankful for the fact that, you know, we've got some good staff to to make sure these things are they're happening and our desires and wishes as we move forward are are being conveyed to you. So again, thank you very much for all this. Uh very thorough. you you clearly know the subject, you are the subject matter experts because it is a lot to take in. Um so appreciate it very much. Thank you, Commissioner. Appreciate it. Commissioner Gordon, is there anything you wanted to add? I'm going to be really brief. Um truly appreciate all the hard work and dedication to this. I know this was quite the undertaking, not just for you all, but also our staff and uh really appreciate the uh the scope of work here. Thank you. And thank you and thanks for the coordination. Thanks staff. Thanks. Thank you staff. I've said it like out loud, right? Just play it over and over and over. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Any direction from the board? Move the board of commissioners direct staff to work with the planning and zoning commission on potential amendments to county code chapters 155 and 158 related to retirement homes and retirement villages. We have a motion. I'm sorry. We have a motion and we have a second. we have any further discussion? I would just like to add, it doesn't have to be part of the motion. I've asked if we could have at least one um opportunity for not for people to come up here in three minutes and talk, but to have a conversation with a group of seniors at the senior center at South Carol because this is where it is and just invite people to come and and and maybe give them this presentation something like this of what we're looking at and get their feedback. And then on the universal design features in particular, that might be something you get feedback from people on. Um,
I just think it would be a good outreach of what we're doing because I think what we're doing here is phenomenal. We're catching up. We're catching up to Ana. We're catching up to Har. We're catching up to Frederick. We're catching up to what people want. We're catching up to Delaware. We're catching up to Pennsylvania. And I think this is the future. And it's in my district. And I'm so proud of it and I'm so excited. And I um I think the economic development piece of it, I know there's push back from some folks that say, "Oh, we need more housing." We do. This is the housing that's going to bring people here and keep people here and keep them here with their families, keep their wealth here, keep their philanthropy here. When people move out of here that we lose their philanthropy and we lost a lot of philanthropy. Um, so I think this product will keep that here and allow people to want to stay here. Um, so I appreciate it, but if that could be part of it just I know it's one maybe one more I think you get more ideas from people that are actually in that age group that are looking for that kind of thing. So if that could be added I would that we a good outreach of good work that we're doing here with the county. Very good. Thank you. All right, we have a motion. We have a second. Is there any further discussion? All those in favor? I. All those opposed? Motion carries. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you guys. And I'm sure we'll see you again. Yes. Uh, self storage is right around the corner. Thank you very much, gentlemen. Thank you, Daffany. Safe travels best. Up next, briefing and discussion and introduction to data centers. Data. Data. Data. Yes. Data. Data. Potato. Potato. Yeah. All right. I guess it's data. I call it data. Data. Data. Data. Data. Data. Pata. Like the movie The Goonies. Data. Data. Is it data or data? You can drive. Is one singular and one plural? Maybe. I don't think so. No. No. It's It's It's very
good. What's the difference? Rednecks versus refined people. They're crazy. They're not. My daughter, the chemical engineer, knows it. She uses it all the time. See, you're going to get the answer. I'm gonna get the answer. Morning commissioners. Good morning to you. Yes. So um as I'm sure you're aware there has been a lot of talk both at a national, state and and local level um regarding data centers and uh so it's a very hot topic. One that's in flux. There's various um state and federal legislation that's all been considered and and so on and so forth. And um as you I'm sure you recall um a couple months ago you passed a deferral on data centers to allow us some time to to research the the issue and and come back and and talk about it with you all and um if you wish uh then we could move forward with looking at what kind of text amendments we would want to put in place from at a local uh level to protect uh the county um as we would wish uh from a zoning perspective. So, uh, we've been working for the past couple months on doing research and, uh, Brenda is going to be walking through a presentation to just bring us all up to speed on terminology and and concepts and issues that we're seeing, uh, at a state and and federal level. And then, if you would so wish, we can take whatever next steps you would like. So, with that, I'll turn it over to Brenda. Good morning. Good morning. Do I have one minute? We give you two. Okay. Well, let me just first start by saying I am not a data center expert. You know, we we put together information based on the research that we've done at this point. But if you have questions that I can't answer, I will certainly look into it. So, I guess um the first
thing to do is let's look at what are we actually talking about here. Data centers. Um generally the definitions are roughly the same. it's a facility, a a building or a room that houses um data, but what we're talking about is for our purposes is going to be a building or a facility, not not a room inside of another use. The state has a definition of data centers. Um it's a it basically matches what we already talked about. that's housing the equipment uh for the um data infrastructure. Same with the federal, it's basically about the same. How many ways you can say the same thing? So, the real question is why do we care? And the the reason we care is because we're trying to be prepared for what might be coming down the pipe here. Uh the anticipated continued rapid expansion of data centers um continues to uh be a trend and um provides opportunities and challenges at the local levels. Uh the have the potential to take advantage of tax revenue generation, potential infrastructure improvements, and community benefits. But it also comes um with requirements that might need to be put in place to mitigate impacts and ensure a long-term sustainability and comm strengthen the community. So here's just a couple pictures. Um one at the top corner is a just a development plan of a data center. The other larger one is um an example of a very large data center. And then the two at the bottom are what um you we probably won't be talking about too much in the rest of the presentation, but it's what the inside of a data center look like looks like is racks and racks and racks of uh data
storage equipment. So, we have a couple of terms that I did want to just go over real quickly. They aren't necessarily related to zoning requirements that we would maybe look at putting in place. um they're more related to um like ownership and management, but I just wanted to go over them quickly so that if you heard them, you'd know um what they meant or how they fit in. So enterprise um data center is basically uh it's owned and operated the entire thing by one organization. So everything inside belongs to one group. A collocation facility is uh one where the fac uh the owner of the facility leases or space to um other organizations inside um and then delivers infrastructure such as like the power and cooling but the tenants themselves manage their own operations. A managed data center is very similar but the difference is that the owner of the facility also manages the infrastructure and hardware in addition to the other things. So those are all basically terms about ownership and management. Um not necessar like I said it doesn't really matter to us so much because it's going to look the same on the outside no matter what the management structure is inside. So the one thing that I found is there is no set standard for um megawatt usage or size for data centers in terms of what you might call uh a certain data center. Um so we've grouped them into three sort of general sizes that we found. The first one on the small end is called an edge data center and um obviously this is the smallest and fits most easily into a community based on its size. The midsize and and I'll look at these
in more detail. I'm just giving you a sense of the size. the midsize data centers. Again, you can see there's a wide range of uh power usage and um size requirements that fits into this. Um and then the hypers scale is the ones that are the giant very very large um facilities. So if we look at the edge data center first, basically what we're looking at, it's called edge because it's on the edge of where the network users are. Like you and me and local businesses were the the uh network users. So they put them closer to the customers so that they can sort of provide a bridge between your use the internet of things and uh where the data is stored and managed at a broader scale. Those would be in the midsize and hypers scale facilities. So they're generally loc they're decentralized and located near urban areas. Um internet of things. I'll just bring up you can see at the bottom these are all the various uses that are now generating the increased demand. um our smartwatches, um security cameras, all of the computer needs that we have, printers, everything that's wireless and generating data, that's all in the internet of things. So the edge data center helps to provide faster service to the customers who are located near it. And this is just a example of what an edge data center the, you know, might look like. You can see it is a little bit smaller scale than what you might picture, but it can also be even smaller yet. The subset of edge data centers are the containers. You see this is actually a small shipping container and um they're designing these to be portable so that they can be moved to where they're needed.
Then you have the midsize um which is pretty much everything between edge and hypers scale. It's designed to fill that gap. Um, it's popular for certain types of uses and they're often found in like corporate campus settings like an industrial or employment campus. Um, they might look like an office building within that um setting. And here's uh some examples. And these are all different sizes. They could be even smaller than this. But this just in a corporate setting, this is what it might look like. The one on the top right is is the developing center. Then we have hypers scale. These are the largest of the data centers and these are the what you've see um very prolific rapid development in Northern Virginia. So the hypers scales are generally responding to um the growth of things like 5G, AI, internet of things deployments. Um and often they're so big that the buildings themselves that do represent the hypers scale facility are designed as a campus facility themselves, not in a campus, but they are the campus. Um they can be designed to scale up if they need to be bigger. Um and they because they're so big, they do have a little bit more emphasis on um the ability to reduce energy consumption, water use, and minimize other risk that is only just trending in the midsize. So you can see things like Amazon, Google, Meta, Apple, IBM, Microsoft are all examples of the of hypers scale users. And here's a picture in Northern Virginia of one that um was under construction. This this is five buildings just for this one facility. You see it's sort of in a campus
setting. Um I was going to wait till the end but but you're transitioning a little bit anyway. Um, do we have any place in Carol County like um, Random House in Hamstead's probably 10 acres and that's the high end of your midscale. Do we have any place in Carol County where the hypers scale buildings could even fit? I look at Amazon I think was a million square feet in Cecil. That's a big building. Yeah. Um do we have any place that they could even happen? So that's that's part of what we're looking to discuss, right? Is um from a there are different aspects related to zoning where we would want to allow them and then um Brenda's going to admit it talk about water usage and and power usage and so on. So I don't want to say it's not possible. Anything's possible with enough money, right? We we don't have too many industrial or commercial areas that are that big. Correct. You know, they could buy the random house building maybe. Yes. Um, you know, but that would be about it. Okay. I'm Yeah, I don't I don't like the water, the power. I don't like a whole lot about it, but I'm just wondering how likely the bigger winds could even come here. So part of our concern and we we brought this up when we first discussed this with you all is that our current zoning code doesn't address data center specifically. So probably the closest match would be warehouse. So if somebody came to us um and said we want to put in a data center, we would pigeon and hole it into a warehouse. So and warehouses are allowed in c certain zoning districts and and so on. So that's really the the purpose of what we're trying to do is figure out what is the desire as far as do we want to change that um not for warehouses but
for data centers specifically and and all that. So under existing zoning code it would be very limited locations where this could be done. Um but we just want to make sure that we're we're following what you all want. Thanks. Sorry. And these do have different requirements that warehouses wouldn't have. Oh yeah. Now this particular facility just point of interest is um when at full buildout will be 300 megawws 130 acres and 2.3 million square feet of building area. So some interesting facts um I'm not going to go through all them but uh Virginia is actually home to 35% of all the hyperscale data centers worldwide. So that's you can see it's it's local So, community benefits, there are community benefits to developing data centers, and this is why a lot of um a lot of communities are considering what they want uh to be able to do with them. They can generate tax revenue. There are construction jobs during development. Um and they can result in high-paying jobs in IT, security, and facility maintenance. They can be used as an opportunity to spur infrastructure investment and development uh particularly in um water and power and um technology and then they can also attract other technology related businesses. On the flip side, there are also community concerns that um arise. For example, the two biggest would be their power usage and their water usage. Uh you either have water or you don't. So, um, that that's kind of a very vital issue that has to be addressed. And then, of course, we already know that we've got power concerns, um, that would need to be addressed because there's such heavy power users. But then, there's other things such as,
um, air pollution, noise, aesthetics, um, you know, that all communities have raised and, um, would possibly need to be addressed or mitigated. At the state level, there's not a whole lot of um requirements for data centers just yet. Uh it is required to uh um get a CPCN. No, it's not. Never mind. Um it's required to get an air quality permit from MDE and also would need a water appropriation permit from MDE if it's not on public water. and that they're high water usage is gen primarily for cooling purposes. There's a lot of um bills that were introduced this year regarding data centers in the Maryland General Assembly. None of these passed. Um someone looks a little familiar there, but they none of these passed. You see that at the bottom, Roberta? Oh, yes. I recognize that. forgot that was there. There was another bill passed though that um wasn't specific to data centers. It was called um HP 1532 which was is known as utility relief act um and that did include some requirements for data centers. It lowers the threshold for what's considered a large load from I think a 100 megawatts of use to 25 megawatts of use. Um requires them to pay their own grid enhancements. They have to register with the Maryland Public Service Commission. And then there's also um in the bill it's only they voluntarily bring their
own energy. But I I imagine there'll be more bills introduced in coming years. So, we did take a look at some of the what other Maryland counties are doing. When I put this together, there were only five counties that either had something in place or in progress and uh only three that had a deferral or moratory in place at that time. I think Harford is also considering one at this time. Just as of yesterday, it was introduced and and Frederick County is in the midst of a major ballot referendum due to data centers. So, that's worth mentioning, right? Good point. Good point. So, there are a number of local requirements that could be considered. Um, when we looked around what other places are doing, um, you can see there's zoning requirements, there's studies that can be required, site development requirements, and even agreements that can be put in place. And I'll I'll look at each of these. So for um under zoning uh you have uh zoning districts where you can specify what data which where data centers would be allowed and whether they'd be principal conditional use or prohibited. Uh you can require specific studies in the zoning in order to identify what the impacts are and um how these impacts might need to be mitigated. And you can include specific site development requires requirements um to implement those plans. If it's a conditional use, um, should be noted that the use would have to go to the board of zoning appeals first in order to be approved by them. Board of zoning appeals could put additional requirements in place that aren't listed in zoning. And then after that approval and whatever conditions are put on it, it would a development plan could then be submitted for uh review and consideration by the planning and zoning commission.
An overlay zone is another type of zoning district that could be considered. And what an overlay zone does is it kind of you map an area. Um so if you took an an underlying use, you would map areas within say a certain industrial zone. Um where you where this would be allowed and then so it wouldn't be allowed anywhere in that district, only where you put this on the map. and then this could impose additional requirements and restrictions on top of what's in the underlying zone. There also um studies that are often required for the data center developers. Um you can see water energy and noise are common studies that are um required for water. Of course, again, one of the biggest things they need to evaluate, they would require them to evaluate their water needs and the impact and if there's water available and um how they would propose to provide that water. You could potentially even require them to bring their own water. Um and this plan could require them to uh re like recycle or reuse the water to help um reduce use of the local water supply or groundwater. Energy manage management study or plan is another one that's often are required and it identifiies energy needs and how they'd be managed or mitigated. Again um you also can potentially require them to bring their own power. That's pretty common. Um such as um putting solar uh powering their facility with solar. Some of the larger facilities also look at small modular reactors which is a small nuclear use um to power the large scale like hypers scale facilities. And then noise studies
um are another type that's commonly imposed and it identifies your base level baseline levels of noise and mitigation measures and to uh address that for people who are nearby. And then you have your site development requirements. So you're familiar with these bulk requirements, setbacks, height limitations, screening, etc. You can also have design standards that you put in place in um your zoning and development code. They could be architectural, landscaping, lighting, um other types of, you know, of standards like this to help mitigate um the irrelevant impacts. And then the last type of thing that we find pretty commonly are agreements that are put in place. There's one called a community benefit agreement, which um is used in Maryland, but I I didn't see it specific necessarily to data centers yet, but but can be. And this is an agreement or a contract that's negotiated between a community group and the developer. generally the um local government isn't a party to it but could be. So then we we'd require the developer through this contract that every that both sides uh sign to provide specific amenities and mitigate a lot of the impacts. And then of course you're also very familiar with the development rights and respon responsibilities agreement. And in in this particular type of agreement, of course, the local government does enter into an agreement with the developer to um establish additional conditions and requirements to mitigate impacts or um generate benefits.
So, I'm going to turn it over to Chris to kind of get a sense from you what direction you might want to go. So hopefully that provides a good background as far as what we're talking about, the scope of what we're talking about and it is a very complex issue and and obviously a lot of um communities are are raising concerns, but there are some benefits that that should be considered. Um so at this point we're we're basically looking for your thoughts and what direction you'd like us to take. Um there are some as Brenda mentioned size considerations. So we could certainly talk about do we want to treat edge um uh data centers differently than um than the midsize and hypers scale. We could come up with three different options, two different options, those sorts of things and all the associated bulk requirements and and so on related to both. Um so really it's we're we're we're looking for your feedback as far as what direction you would like us to take. We could certainly um put together a work session and discuss this in more detail with you all if you wanted or we could start working with um planning commission and obviously doing more research and and also seeing what other jurisdictions at the federal and state level and come up with kind of the best practices and and recommendations to you all um and work through the planning commission with some some uh actual text amendment suggestions. So So first of all, yeah, go ahead. First of all, Chris, I just want to say thank you to to you and Brendan, to everybody for putting this presentation together. I mean, I know it's a lot of research and a lot of this is is, you know, ever evolving is every year is, you know, yields new uh technology uh uh parameters and and and new u u uh I guess you would call them developments within AI and data centers and everything they're involved in. So, for me, and I'm I'm certainly not not going to uh to speak for any of my colleagues.
I mean I while I appreciate all the the research and the the the information that you've provided to us I mean for me um I guess for me it really does come down to a question of uh community and energy right so uh and if you don't have the answer to this particular question today that that's quite okay um so what size determines whether on-site power generation or drawing from the grid is appropriate for a data center right and the reason why I ask that is obviously because we're dealing with MPP. And so if Virginia needs energy from Pennsylvania and they need our county to convey that energy to Virginia, who might we end up drawing our energy from and who are we going to infringe upon to get it, right? So I think with data centers you know by their nature it isn't just a question of how it affects the places in which they are constructed but how do they affect the places that uh surround them because those places places invariably are going to have to in some way shape or form contribute to a data center and then so for us personally um you know how do they demonstrate a fittingness within the community as it exists as we you know went through that whole uh exercise at solar and we're continuing to to fight solar and the transmission lines. Now, you know, are these in keeping with the nature and the character of Carol County? And personally, I would argue that they're not. Um again my my colleagues may disagree with me and and maybe you know suggest restrictions or or a way to to you know maybe advance some middle path but for me I I just don't see how uh data centers especially the hypers scale or even the midsize um uh for that matter um you know would demonstrate a fittingness to the the the fabric of our county. So that's just at least where I'm coming from. and and al along with that you talked to energy and and a um I don't think we need a work session. I think you guys need to get
from more more information and to go through the process. But my concern is also water. I know like um we we were going to build for a marijuana place. They recycled the water could reuse it. So, their needs weren't much once they got going and they didn't put much into the sanitary sewer. Is that the case here? Or does it evaporate? Does it can they reclaim it? I I I think as well as energy, you need to find out how much water will they need and and and Virginia, there's plenty of data. Yeah. Or data, whatever. But um you know and and how much goes into the sanitary sewer because I think that's important because my inclination is similar to yours. I don't know if we want them but but we need to know the facts of of what they do and and would and how can we tax them? Can we get income that offsets some of the issues? So that's a good question. Yeah, I I I appreciate that. Um yeah, aside from from what you're going to hear from us individually up here, I'm not really sure I have much of a direction for you to go at this point in terms of a work session or sending this to the planning and zoning commission. I mean, we did put a 12-month moratorum for lack of a better term for on these and I feel like we do have time. Um we are discussing this issue right now. It's the right thing to do. uh counties throughout the Mid-Atlantic right next door in fact in Frederick County are struggling with this issue because they didn't foresee the problems. They didn't prepare perhaps and I think in a lot of cases they just didn't care. Um you know they look at the revenue side of this and incidentally all these counties that are going down this route they're the same counties that have deficits every single year. this has not solved their spending problems. That's not hasn't given more money to schools and parks and recreation, all the things that people
in this county care about. So, that's that's an irony that's not that that shouldn't be ignored. Um, but this is certainly something that we should definitely be looking at and maybe there's a right way to do this at some point. Um, self-sufficiency in terms of energy, water, and all those things. Uh yes, they are putting an enormous strain on energy grids and at the same time it has been proven and the Maryland Office of People's Council and a lot of other entities and organizations around the state, the these data centers are raising people's electric and water bills. I mean, that's just the facts of the matter. So, I'm very glad we're taking a look at this. Uh people in Carol County deserve this. We're not saying we don't want them, but there if there's a right way to do it, then that's that's where we need to be going. Um, but, uh, this is what this is what people, especially in rural counties like ourselves, this is what this is what people expect out of us. And what we're seeing throughout the state and Northern Virginia, it's a real mess. um in Frederick County right now, they're going through an entire ballot referendum process where they're going to vote on these things because a couple of them are going in and there really was very little um thought given to any of these things that that that you and Brenda just just discussed with us. And that's really unforgivable. That should not be happening. That is not good. That is not good policy. That is not good executive legislative policy. And that's what we that's what we exercise here. And unfortunately in Frederick County in particular, uh, elected officials have tried to thwart that entire process of the people having their say over what happens here. That's not happening here in Carol County. We're going to take a time out to if we're going to do this, we're going to do it right. And there's obviously a lot to learn. And there's things changing all the time. I mean, the technology and the uh the scope of these things and how they're operating, they're changing constantly. And I
think somebody mentioned at a planning and zoning commission meeting a few months back. I think one of the planning and zoning commission members even mentioned, you know, 20 30 years from now, who knows if data centers are even going to exist anymore. There will be some better way of doing things because that's what that's what we do here. You know, that's what we do and that that's that's American ingenuity, right? So, I appreciate all the work you put into it. I personally, aside from some of the comments you'll hear from us, I I don't think I really have a a um a direction anything specific for you to tell you now. Only that thank you for your work on this and clearly you and your staff understand that this is a very important issue and I appreciate it. Yes, if I may for just a second, all the things that you raised are are exactly my concerns as well. And um from a um zoning code perspective, um I'm I'm happy that the commissioners put in place the deferral that gave us time to look at these because if a and and we have not been contacted by any I don't want people to assume that we're we're fighting someone coming or anything like that, right? We have we have not been approached. However, if someone were to approach the county, we would be obligated to start looking at how do we treat them in the zoning code and we don't have anything right now. So, we would have to treat them as a warehouse and start processing them as a warehouse and so on. So, this deferral is giving us some time to maybe we can't solve everything. But I think um my opinion would be to put some basic guard rails in place um to protect us that if something were to come in, we at least have those and and maybe the finer details are worked out as the state passes more regulations, the feds pass more regulations and so on. But my recommendation would be that we get some basic guardrails in place so we're not defaulting to a basic warehouse um if one were to be proposed. Right. Well, that's that's sound that's sound advice. Um, I don't know what that would look like, but if if that's something the other commissioners are willing
to go toward, that sounds completely reasonable to me. I greatly appreciate you and staff doing all the uh hard work on this. And obviously, I think right now I agree with all of you. I don't see a point that we need to have another uh work session on this at this moment. Um, greatly appreciate all of you up here uh taking up this with me that we deferred this for a year because this we've got to get ahead of this, not behind it. That's I think you know Commissioner Garren said it best. Look what's going on in Frederick. I mean that's that's a huge problem. We don't want it to end up on a ballot referendum. We want to do what we need to do. Um and I think right now the best thing is to figure out how do we approach this? And you know to Mr. Hines's point about it being a warehouse. We know it's not a warehouse. It just falls in that category currently. So I think I think we're doing the right I know we're doing the right thing. But I really appreciate all of us taking the time and effort and energy because obviously we do have limited water. it is affecting people's electric bills and I think we're doing this in the most respectful way possible. Um I do think we need to come up with some language in the future. Doesn't need to be right now but before we run out of uh time unless we're to extend this deferral. I think we do need to get something in place because the last thing we want to do and luckily it hasn't happened it won't happen is have somebody come in and be able to make it as a warehouse. So, I greatly appreciate all the work. Last but not least, so I appreciate again that you were proactive on this because it's going to take a long time to get involved. I I cannot see how you can do this alone. And when I say alone, this is a regional issue and I I had thought some of these bills had maybe passed. Um, we almost need to work with someone else that's either doing it. You can't do this alone. I mean, it's all new frontier, you know. So, and I want to say I think that we are the policy makers, the elected officials should be helping you. It should not be punted to the planning commission at
this point. We're the policy makers on policy, but getting the information and and working with other counties or even talking to it, the pros and cons in Lowden County, what guardrails can we put up um either to to discourage it, to make sure it's mediated, if it would would present itself, but what are all the options? I I don't know about the environmental issues. No one really talks about them. We know about the energy use and all I can tell you is whether we put them or someone else puts them right now the energy we're going to pay for because it's so messed up how this is being determined. Lowden County is taking our they're eating our lunch with power. They're getting our my daughter lives in Lowden County. Their electric bill is no complaint like ours. I don't know how they do it but we're paying the price somehow for other thing. Maybe it's other things but they're not their electric bills are not high in Lon County. So that's a gripe of mine. Not not that I want them to pay more electric bills, but you know, we're footing the bill for this for this all this stuff for many other reasons. And now we're going to be paying it for the the um transmission line as well, which isn't even starting to hit hit people's electric line electric bills yet, but it will because all the stuff that the power companies are doing with the transmission line is all going into distribution rates for people in the state of Maryland, even if we don't benefit at all. And it's wrong and it needs to change. That's why I keep putting that out there that that is affecting our rates of how they're trying to put this power line in and they shouldn't have gone this route. But I would suggest if there's opportunities for you to work in as a as a group, I don't know if we need even I think our economic development people should be involved in this one way or another. Um to do some homework on it and then the environmental people should be involved with it. How does it affect water? I hear that but like what does that mean in Ldon County? I read their paper and I go down there all the time. All they talk about, you talk about benefits financially, the money that's coming in from these data centers is it's they're drunk off of it. Even their jail looks like the Taja Mahal. It because they can't find
enough to spend the money on. I'm not saying you do it for that reason. I'm just telling you uh they overlook a lot and they they've put them they started along the Dallas throughway which is a very good place to put them. It's a highway big highway and there data centers then there communities. However, you know what is the impact on water? I keep hearing that, you know, obviously they've got hund they've got hundreds of them. I think 600 or something. There's a ton of them. Hundreds. Um, but they somewhat they have many of them separated, you know, in certain areas. I don't know if they're hooked to public water. Do they use other type of I don't know how they do it because they obviously have water issues as well. So, I'd like to understand the water piece of it because here we can't even have wet ponds because of brown trout, but they're they've got all these data centers somehow affecting the water and it doesn't seem to be word about it. So I'd like to understand that environmental impact um the water the recycling plan and you mentioned that on the hypers scale ones that there is more emphasis on reducing energy consumption water use and minimizing the risk of outages I would hope that after these hypers scale big ones um figure this stuff out that it would go down to the smaller ones and they'd you know what things could we mandate what could we make them do for small ones because I'm not asking them to come but right now as you said a warehouse what if random house wasn't here anymore they said oh want to put a data center in what can you just exclude and say you can't have that use or not you know and there there are questions but I'm not asking you to go alone at this I mean if there's a way to hook up with Frederick County uh people in Lowden County that have been there lessons learned is there some group out there because it's a whole new frontier and it's big and I think that we as the commissioners should be in the policy seat of it and then if we ever decide we want to move in that direction or get the pressure to move in that ction, we'd be prepared and we'd even have what would it look like if you tax it? I don't know how they tax it there. All I know is that I think it's either a third or a half of their county budget is paid for by data centers. I'm not suggesting
it. Teachers are very well paid. people tend to not I think they've getting overload because I know Prince um Prince William County they had a a upscale neighborhood of million-doll millions of dollars of houses and the developer just sold the property to the data center for like 10 times more than he would have ever gotten on all the profits for all those houses. That's crazy. It's it's it's it's almost a new frontier. I mean or something we've got to deal with. So I would just suggest that you know keep moving forward with this. I will be happily help be involved with it. I think the policy part of it is important of whether we put guardrails in place in case they want to come. But we need we need to do our homework on it. You know what is the water issue? What and going to somewhere where they're doing it. Is it an issue? What are they doing about it? Um I think they all should be providing their own electricity. I know uh at the federal level I think uh FK is correct me if I'm wrong. I think FK is um looking at making certain users provide their own energy. Um right now they're getting it the cheapest place they can which is off the grid and making everyone else pay for this stuff as well. But I know down at Northward Grman they actually have small nuclear reactors that they used to use on submarines years ago or still use and they're offering them now for data centers. But until they're forced to use them um so maybe that has to come from the feds but they should be providing their own energy. they should not be sucking down energy from Pennsylvania coming through Carol County. But right now, that is what's happening and it's it's a reality and we whether we do it or not is it's going to keep it's going to keep moving forward unless we uh push push for an alternative. So, you know, the being proactive, can we simply exclude a use? You know, if one of our big warehouse things came, could we say no? I don't even in the future, could we say no? Um and then what would that look like? And again, what are the environmental benefits? What are the um and and we should put in place you must provide your own energy. If if we even were going to think about it, you'd have that in
place as a as a discouragement. You know what I'm saying? If you have to if you have to offer it, you would have the discouragement there to say yes, you had have to provide your own energy. This would be the tax. And if we don't want it, you would discourage it by those types of things and and and maybe size. But I think ignoring it is not not ignoring it, but not dealing with it is not helpful because it's going to be in front of us and then we're going to be in a crisis. So your your proactiveness is appreciated and it is it is here and um everybody loves AI. I don't think this is going away once people get businesses and all. I mean the chamber the other day was saying they're having classes about it. It is a useful tool and unfortunately this is the way it's powered. I don't understand at all. Uh that demand is not going to go away. So we've got to realize that and again it could be all around us but then what does it mean if it's it presents itself here. So I be happy to um help in any way but I think if you could these other counties are dealing with it as well. probably their economies of scale of brain power, you know, working with them if there's some consortium or but I would also again talk to folks in in Lowden and say what how did you handle this stuff coming? What would you do different? What if you didn't want it? They they probably know some of those things that that we don't know. And then and that's our normal course of action when we're we're dealing with something like this. We work with Mako. We work with the various counties. We talk to our cohorts and in other jurisdictions and so on. that that's just normal process. It's all new to them, too. I mean, you know what I'm saying? It's and it's a you have your regular job to do. This is a whole big issue that could take a lot of staff time and we're not that huge to have Brenda for it's it's bigger than one per you know what I'm saying. It's it's it is a bigger than just one person. That's my point. This is not just I'm not putting this pressure on one or two people or the department because it's it's large. But I do think the policy part and and these issues should come back to this board and then and then
you know once we decide whether to totally try to not have any or have small ones or allow for it or discourage it or whatever at least that policy decision is coming from the elected body who is elected to make those decisions then we would give those recommendations to the board of the planning commission because they don't know what to do either. So maybe maybe after we do a little more research and outreach to um um you know counties like Lowden and other places maybe there are a few others around the the country you know as you said what they've done right what would they do again maybe Frederick County what are they doing etc that we um flesh out some possible courses of action um some things to think about and then um um have um a in-depth conversation with the board at that point, more stuff for you to chew on and then you can give more specific direction of where you want to go policy-wise to the commission. We want them to start the process but not go to the planning commission, come back to us and then see I hate to see us do it in a panic because somebody's asked for one, right? So, I think we need to do it now. Um, Mr. Burke, if if we wanted to A year sounds like a long time, but it ain't. If we wanted to extend a deferral, are we okay doing that? It's uh it was in place in in February. So So if next February or whatever January we said we want to extend it, they're still working on it. We can. Yes. As long as you have legitimate reason to extend it and you you will if they're still working on it. So Okay. And then also understanding that some of the pictures you showed showed them like out outside of areas that didn't seem that they're connect I know in Len County they have them both close and far to um I guess growth areas. Well well water and sewer because you certainly would not I would not want them to be tapping into water and sewer necessarily because we don't then we'd have to
provide it. You know what are they doing about that? Uh and environmentally you're the storm water guy. My gosh how much storm water for a facility that big? A lot. a lot and and but that's a technical that's a technical but the reason that I ask is because you know um Lowden County in the Midwest they got tons of land it's flat they don't have to worry about wetlands and all that kind of stuff but in Virginia they sort of still do because they're similar to us or not just south of us so they similarly positioned as we are not sure how they're dealing with all those things and I don't want to become Lowden County I'm just telling you they're doing it because they're getting a lot of benefit from it and their citizens I think they're on hold now like we've have enough but They they've made uh it's a very it's a one of the wealthiest counties in the country and and it has been but it is because and it's a lot of I bet you they have one person that's just dedicated to answering all these questions because I am sure we are not the only county. No, but all these land so come back to us. I mean I I think and we but Commissioner Garren you wanted to Yeah. Just so for the purpose of moving things forward I think what we're asking and I don't know if we need a motion or not but we're asking for Mr. Hind to do is formulate some some of that basic quote unquote guardrail language. Um, and when you've got it, come back and Yes. We'll put on the agenda and and and consider it appropriately. Yeah. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. Thanks for all the work. Yes. Thank you. Thank you very much. You can say someday I remember when I worked on that data center stuff. Now, now it's in space. By then I might not have a good memory. So, we appreciate all you guys are doing. I've thanked you once today. So, we need to wait 24 hours. I'll do it again. Thank you both very much. Thank you. So, next we'll move into public comment. Robera, do we have anybody here for public comment? No, sir. All right. Thank you very much. Chris, do we have anybody on the line for public comment? Yes, sir. We have one caller left. Uh caller, if you could use star six to unmute, you'll have
three minutes. Please identify yourself and tell us where you're calling from. Thank you. Miss Adelide. Yes. Yes. Good morning. Can you hear me? Yes. Yes. Thank you. Good morning, commissioners. I did get my timer on. You're always worth the wait. Katherine Adelaide, one of nine members of the Carol County Republican Central Committee. And I did want to thank you uh for the opportunity to speak to you as always and for also remembering the National Day of Prayer. Our country needs prayer and we also need action. Um, prayer is a starting point, but we need to take the next steps and do action, which I know these commissioners both pray and act. So, I appreciate that. Okay, big news. Our big news for Carol County Republican Central Committee is the MDGOP spring convention, which begins tomorrow, runs through Saturday at Rocky Gap Resort in beautiful Alageney County. So, pray for that event. I did want to thank the central committee again for purchasing a full page ad for the Maryland Right to Life Convention. That's my big news of the day because one week from Saturday, Saturday May 16th um will be the car the Maryland right to life uh convention in beautiful Gambles. There'll be an opening prayer breakfast from 8:00 to 9:00. The convention runs from 9:00 to 5:30 with food trucks for a picnic lunch and a closing cookout with live music. The um the theme is a rising tide for life. It's a family-friendly event. Um there no be no victim images and it's to educate and encourage the next generation of prolifers. Um you can go to maryland righttolifeconvention.com if you haven't purchased the ticket. But if you can't make it out, I'm really encouraging you to consider purchasing a oneline tribute for $25. Um it can be a memorial. Uh for example, Carol County right to life, we remembered all the pre-born babies lost to
abortion. And we also funded a full page ad. I did one for my sister I lost tragically two years ago. Um Carol County uh yeah Carol County right to life did a memorial and uh and actually a a candidate who's running her son is graduating on that day. So she's going to actually do a tribute to her son who is pro-life. So get creative but you know if you can't make it it's just a small wonderful way to support the front line of remaining pro-life at least in Carol County and hopefully pushing into Maryland as well. And then finally, um I did want to wish everybody a happy Mother's Day. Obviously, thank your mother for having you. And I especially wanted to really just honor the mothers of the pre-born children. Um they are mothers from the moment of conception and we need to support them. I have a daughter-in-law who's 18 who is a pre-born mother and I'll be sending her a wonderful Mother's Day card. So, wishing everybody a wonderful weekend and happy Mother's Day. Thank you very much, Chris. We have anybody else on Okay, that's all I have, sir. Thank you. Thank you very much. All right, we'll move into administrative session open. Does anybody have anything for admin open today? I do. I hope I wrote this right. If I didn't, um it was brought to my attention that our deferrals on the other agenda items are coming up in June. So, we needed to extend them so these guys have time for their work. Um and they haven't done the storage facilities yet. So, I don't know all what's open and what we've done. So, I want to make it broad. So, I just want to add to uh my motion is to add um current deferrals that are in place to the agenda for next week for possible extension to accommodate the current anticipated timeline for completion of tasks by our consultants uh through the planning and zoning commission and board of commissioners approval process and they will give us that's it. I give you two thumb two thumbs up on that motion. Well done. Second. Okay. Second. All right. So,
we have a motion and a second to add deferrals or the rem outstanding deferrals to the agenda for next week. Is there any discussion? All those in favor? I. All those opposed? Motion carries. And one more. I just came up with this later. I'm allowed to have more. No, but this is goes with it because I I talked about I want to make officially a motion. We talked about the effect on the house bill and I don't remember the number that about um the building um approval process. I don't know if there's regulations written, but I just would like Chris to give us an update on that. He's going to, but just I just want to make an official motion to say that we want to do this. The effect of the House bill, whatever number it is on the plan approval process and the effective date and to make sure that whatever we're doing here, if we know much about it, will be considered. I read the bill will be considered as we're moving through this um process. So, you're you're just asking for I think so update on House Bill. Yes. update on House Bill, whatever the number is about the plan approval process and the effective date and some details. Right. We're not 100% sure, but we think the one that you may be referring to did not pass. Uh the one I mentioned, the 30 days is the vesting that changes from the late to early vesting. Whatever whatever we'll check it out. That's why I left it. Whatever impact would be on this on any of these processes, one or two bills. It's a concern because um because life will change in OC whatever whichever one is the deal. Life will change on October 1st. That's what we need to figure out what and if they have any regulations. So that that's my motion just to get updated on that and staff is planning to do that. Okay. I I can Okay, I can second that. I just you're what you're asking for is a briefing on any relevant recently passed legislation that affects our Okay, I can I can I can second that. It affects our our planning process. Sure. Okay. All right, fair enough. We have a motion. We have a second. Any further discussion? All those in favor? I. All those opposed? Motion carries. All
right. Anybody else have anything else for admin open? Yes. Um, and uh, I just want to note that speaking of deferrals, yesterday at 4:39 p.m. all of us got an email that the Carol Highlands self storage building um, and I'll skim um, all they've received all technical approvals for the proposed facility. Under normal circumstances, they would be on the June Planning and Zoning Commission, but because of our deferral, that cannot be scheduled. And uh my concern is here we've got a project that has met every requirement we have. He's exceeded most um building height setbacks, etc., etc., and we are now delaying um them being able to start it. And I I if I may um suggest that would be part of your conversation maybe next week because the two deferrals that need to be extended or not um um are the uh retirement villages and homes and the self storage the um data centers of course that really doesn't count for these purposes and um self uh wait no self clustering cluster clustering But there's nothing in there's nothing in the queue right now for that. But we should clustering. It's the clustering in the retirement homes that need to be um extended or not. Self storage has already been extended. So, excuse me. So, yes, that's a different conversation. That's why I just said whatever needs to be extended because I can't remember. So, the two need to be extended. That will be covered by your motion, commissioner. But, uh the self storage, this one would not be correct. So, I I wanted to mention and uh um and make sure all five
commissioners and anyone listening know that we're we're now delaying that project and they've met every they've done everything we ask, everything the community asked. Okay. Thank you very much, Commissioner. Um so, I guess we'll be talking about that next week and then um we could add that to the agenda. That that is not I mean so do that that is that would I would say that would not be part of the of commissioner Krebs's right because so is that is it a right now the storage facility deferral is for how long is it I think we did it for another six months okay all right so it's still in place yes thank you all right does anybody else have anything for admin open can I just ask clarity do we want to add the this um whether you want to continue the self- storage deferral for this particular property or not to the agenda next week as an agenda item. I think I think I think given the conversation on deferrals we should I mean given the fact that they're at that that point and just the general conversation I think we should at least have some discussion about it. So I would I'm going to I didn't want to interrupt you. He looked like you wanted No, I wanted to say we we still have a consultant that's been paid to look at this stuff. So yeah, I'm going to what I'm what I'm going to recommend is two separate agenda items. Um, one on the deferral extensions that are looming in front of you. Those are the retirement homes, villages and the clustering and then a separate item on this um self self storage um issue because that deferral has been extended. And so this this question is in light of a project now meeting all the criteria to going to go to planning commission and in fact now truly being deferred because of
the deferral. Do you want to make any changes? That's really the question. Does that make sense to Yeah. And what I'm going to say I mean the the folks are doing that um to push the envelope. We made a decision to extend the deferral. They knew that. They knew there we we've moved them forward in good faith to get to this point. I would have preferred to say don't move to this point. Stop back then and we wouldn't have moved to this point. But we gave them the grace to do that. The storage facility folks and the retirement. They knew clearly that where we were heading I believe to do was right just like we're doing with public, you know, MP. We're going to fight it technically. We're probably going to not win if we don't do something different. But we're going to continue. But we have control of this. So right now we we've gone through this. We just said we're going to extend it until the consultant comes back with some recommendations and I think we should stick to that because nothing has changed. There's no new information that has come up um to the facility guy. He's act he made a decision to continue to move forward and that's fine. But um we have two others that are now moving forward with they be included as well. There's two more that have and we're going to probably have five more. We're going to have them all over the place because it's the only place in the world that lets you do it like this. But we have a consultant in place to to recommend make recommendations about next to neighborhoods and I think we should stick with that because it's already we've already done it and there's nothing that's changed that this developer didn't know when we put the deferral extended it put in place. I I I don't I don't I don't I don't know if adding it as a separate agenda item. I don't agree with that concept, but a commissioner has a a wide breath of ability to raise that issue during that deferral discussion like you just did and we can certainly have a discussion about it, but I mean we do have a deferral in place, but the commissioner can vote to add anything to an agenda as well. So, well, I'm just recommending it be a separate item because that deferral
is that deferral has already been extended. I understand that. It's not a question of of Yeah, I think it's not a question of a good point. It's a different issue and and I would argue that what's changed is they've completed everything. And and as far as the other two, they're a year or so away. If we can't resolve this issue in a year or so, we ought to give up. It's they're they're not factors in this one. And that's what I wanted to mention today. And if if somebody else is interested in us discussing it in open session, I'd love it. But um if nobody else is, then I don't know if it's a it's a reason to. So well, I think the challenge is they're not in the same place. You have two that are just starting out. This one's farther along. So for me personally, I'd rather have some conversation about Yeah. I'm I'm defending I mean, we have we have a a sort of loose set of rules. Commissioner Krebs made a good comment. It's not part of her motion. And I understand that. Yeah. We we sort of have a loose set of rules in that regards time. But you have every right you have every right to raise that issue. And so if that's what that's why I didn't wear a tie today. And you know what? And you look great. You look great. So mark that one down on the calendar as well. It almost was three of us. So for the sake of time, I guess what do we I mean and the question becomes also timewise. If this is going to come back up, we need to make sure it's on the agenda and we'll have to get everybody to come in here and say their peace. But keep in mind, it's setting a precedent. If we do it for the storage facility, you've now set a precedent for the retirement villages because they're moving along. We in good faith let them move along all the projects and at their own risk. And I think they're I don't know, but we're basically if we do it for that and have that discussion, then next week it's going to be for the retirement villages. And then we might as well have not had the consultant because that's all that's left. I mean, that's what's left in to to be done. So,
it's sort of it's sort of an exercise we're doing for no real meaning. Commissioner, I'm I'm I'm going to respectfully disagree with that. Um, you know, what we're talking about, I guess what my colleagues are talking about here is a potential exemption for that storage facility, but I wouldn't say that that hiring a consultant has been for not. I mean the presentation we received today was phenomenal. I mean there plenty of places we can strengthen our code and improve some things and unanimously we all said yeah let's let's look at some of those potential changes um and and uh by virtue of uh the motions you made a couple of minutes ago u you know it was unanimous to to put the the discussion on the deferrals on the agenda again. So I you know I certainly would support having a discussion about a specific topic about potential exemption for them as well. Uh, and who knows, maybe all five of us agree with it or disagree with it. Or maybe the vote is is is u, you know, divided, but I certainly think we should uh give uh Commissioner uh Garin, I'm sorry, Commissioner Gordon and Commissioner Kyer the the grace of having something on the agenda, too. And and and what the procedure would be, you know, like you say, we're uh kind of in China uncharted territory with stuff. So, you know, what what can we do and what's the procedure and is there another hearing? You know, what what's the procedure? So, yeah, I' I'd love to see us discuss it. Could we agree to put it on not next week's agenda, but the week after to give Mr. Hine a chance to address some of our concerns because when we did have that deferral vote, I think there were several of us who did have concerns about the endgame on this. So, if we can give him at least two weeks commit, Mr. two weeks before it's on the agenda. Is that it's up to either of you? I don't know what else we hear. They've done everything and he's told us that. Well, I mean I and I want to hear from Mr. Hine, too, uh on that. I just do. I mean, um, I I think he's prepared to
talk about the other request that Commissioner Krebs had, which is the the timeline and how the new legislation will affect the timeline for um the all of these issues in in front of you. Um, it does make it much more compressed. Um, I hope you're right, it's six months. I hope I'm wrong that it's 30 days. Um because um if if I'm right uh and something comes in on October 1st, it has to be up or down. On October 30, it's actually 35 days, which is really weird. Um but anyway, um so six months gives us a whole lot more time um if you're right, but even then is super compressed for sort of for that initial yes, you you are vested or not vested conversation. So um um but he's he is prepared to have that conversation and I think that does have an impact on all of these conversations. So, you're saying he he can be ready next week for that particular aspect of the conversation, and I don't I'm not 100% sure that's where Commissioner Garin was going, but if I was understanding, it was just strictly on the this this one storage facility case was the only thing I I mean, again, I just want to I just want to give him an opportunity to with everything going on if he needs more than a week. But again, you have you have every right to raise this issue, but I think you have a valid point. I think to give him the opportunity at time, that's val that's valid. Okay. So, I I'm okay with that. It's up to So, we want it on the agenda two weeks. Okay. You want to make a motion for that? Uh, I so move. Yeah, we put Okay. put the uh deferral and possible exemption on the agenda in two weeks. All right. We have a motion. Do we have a second? Second. We have a motion in a second. Is there any further discussion? All those in favor? I. All those opposed? Motion carries. Okay. Just make sure I'm clear. Commissioner Krebs's request next
week is next week. The other is the following request for the the timeline issue. Yes. But then this request is for two weeks. Two weeks. Okay. Just making sure I'm clear. Thank you. All right. Does anybody else have anything for admin open? All right. Hearing nothing. We'll go into agenda review for the week. No one said it was going to be easy. That's good discussion though. It was a very good discussion. Good morning, Wanda. You Wanda. Good morning, Wanda. How are you? Good. All right. So, the week of Monday, May 11th. Monday, May 11th, uh, homeless services summit with Commissioner Kyler at Carol County Community College. Tuesday, May 12th, uh, board of county commissioners open session with an adopted budget work session. And to be very clear, there is no public comment at that. And, uh, then at 3:00 p.m., transit advisory committee with commissioners Kyler and Krebs. Uh, 7:00 p.m. 11th annual drug overdose and prevention vigil at the Portugo at St. John with commissioners Gordon and Kyler. Wednesday, May 13th, farm museum board meeting with myself. 5 o'clock PM historic preservation month reception. Uh Sunday morning at Savannah's in New Windsor with Commissioner Gordon. Thursday, May 14th, 8:00 a.m. closed admin followed by open session at 9:00 a.m. Item number one, priority Carol Scouts of America State of Scouting presentation to the county and then older Americans month proclamation. Item number two, uh, grant and approval to accept application and acceptance of award for Marbidco local government cost share program for the faithful friends farm LLC expansion project. Item number three, contract award for coordinated community support services for Carroll County uh, public schools. Item number four, approval to purchase Cisco Hyperflex replacement. Item number five, approval to purchase pavement testing and rehabilitation recommendations. Item number six, approval to purchase storm water pipe CCTV and evaluation services. Item number seven, budget transfer small area plan amendment and overlay zoning district. Item number eight,
contract award for small area plan amendment and overlay zoning district for the freedom area. Item number nine, uh discussion decision amendments to chapter 158 use off the premises signs and chapter 158.13 general regulations in chapter 158. the the billboard conversation we've been having. Item number 10. Uh yes, Commissioner. Item nine, public hearing and comments are closed. So that's no public comments. Correct. Correct. Thank Thank you for the Thank you for pointing that out, Commissioner. I just think the people are here. It says it does say. Yeah. Yeah, but I wanted people to hear that. Yeah, good point. If anybody's listening and Well, it says it on each of these items, I think. Nope. Oh, no. Okay. I thought it said it the other one. I read it wrong. Sorry. No, no worries. Item number 10, uh, uh, briefing discussion, possible decision on proposed amendments to chapter 15 forest conservation. Uh, item number 11, work session on road design and traffic impact studies. But we also now have the two uh, items that uh, Commissioner Krebs raised as well. So, do we want to uh, postpone the work session on road design and traffic impact studies? Because I think that we probably will have a full agenda otherwise. Is everybody okay with pushing that off a week? The road studies work session? I'm okay with it. Okay. All right. So, we'll we'll move that off then. Uh that'll So, then after Commissioner Krebs items, we'll have public comments followed by admin open agenda review and then that evening is the joint Maryland Municipal League chapter dinner for Carol and Frederick Countyy's. I will be attending that. I must have missed the RSVP. RSVP. Who's going to miss going to dinner in Mount AR? Okay. So, wait. So, you are or you're not going? I am going. I I didn't see the invitation for some reason. You can probably still go, I'm sure. Yeah, they'll they'll let you in. If not, if not, we'll sneak you in. I'll just go as your date, Joe. Okay, that works. That works. And then, uh, want to spend the evening in Mount Airy? Mount Air is what I just said. That's right.
We're going to be in Commissioner Garren's neck of the woods. All right. So, so Commissioners Garren, Kyler, Viliatti are attending and Commissioner Krebs. Um, and then Friday shows nothing on the formal calendar. Saturday May 16th is Hemstead day with Commissioner Kyler and then Sunday May 17th Commissioner Krebs has the podcast. Are there any changes or alterations to our first week hearing? None. We'll go into the second week. I just have a question. Yes. While you're all here because I might miss you on the on the adopted budget work session. Can you just tell me how that works? So it's it's basically what we were doing in the closed work sessions but will be on film and at that point we can add a couple things, remove a couple things. Do we go through like like capital first and then operating? I mean is it I mean Oh no. It's just like a work session with us. So like when we go in there on uh Tuesday u you know there are two things that I'll be requesting that we're going to add to to the the budget and then we'll vote it up or down and then uh once we have all of our discussions together about you the formation of the budget we'll vote to advance it or to to and if we vote to to move it forward we'll have to vote on it in a separate open session to to actually uh implement the budget to move it forward. Can I just ask I mean it was trouble for me just because I'm a little slow but popping back and forth between capital and operating. Can we like do one and then do the other one just so we Oh, you mean you separate what we're Well, one's capital, one's operating and might it might be enterprise funds or whatever, but can we just like work on one and then work on the next one instead of hopping back and forth? Well, I mean I guess it really comes down to how the board wants to do it. I mean the two requests that I'm going to make I think one of them I think I think both of them are operator I think no yours are operating at are they both what you asked me about was no it's just easier I don't care which way we do it's just easier if you stick to one and finish the one and then it's certainly reasonable to just stick to one and do the ones in that and see what the impact would be and then go to the next one. Well, see, and the reason why I was curious about what I'm going to bring up is because even though it it is I guess it's operational, I'm not requesting anything beyond this year for it. So, that's why I
was curious with it. So, oper Okay. All right. So, one time it still can be and bonds or something affect both. Okay. And and I I just I don't care how we do it, but okay. We've done it well and the only thing I don't want to hear is we get done capital, we get done operating, and one of you want to bring up something for capital, then you certainly can. Oh, sure. Sure. I'm just saying if we could at the first round try to stick the one and do all the and then certainly you can keep coming back just all right. Makes sense. So, all right. So, uh so again, u and that's here that's in this room. I'll be in this room. All right. So, the week of Monday, May 18th, if there's nothing else for the previous week, uh formal calendar for Monday, May 18th shows nothing. Tuesday, May 19th, 7:30 a.m. Chamber of Commerce annual public safety awards. All five of us are slated to attend and at 9:00 a.m. Planning and zoning commission. Uh however, if needed at 10:00 a.m. we will have a second adopted budget work session if needed. And Wanda, I'll be at planning and zoning if we don't need that. So we could indeed accept the final budget at either meeting. Correct. Correct. So after we make the changes if we make stuff the next which we were there'll be little things. Yep. Do we have any um time requirements having to have that out for a certain amount of time? Is there anything? It's just done. As long as they're not doing something like raising taxes or or Yeah. Yeah. You there are certain changes you cannot make after the public hearing has happened. U you can't raise taxes without another public hearing, for example. Um and just to be very clear, we're not raising taxes. I just want to be very clear about that. Thank you for pointing that. It was just an easy example. We are not raising taxes. No, but I guess what I'm saying is if we all add, you know, put these things in and and somebody's expecting that we do something else. There is nothing more unless unless we might not do we're saying we might not do the second work session
because we might not need it. But if the people that ask us to do these things know that it didn't happen. Well, we can talk about it next week. I'm not sure what they are. Okay. So, if needed, we can talk further. Okay. So, if needed, uh, public budget work session and there will be no public comment at that. Then at 2:00 p.m. Veterans Advisory Meeting with Commissioners Gordon and Kyler. 5:00 p.m. certificate ceremony for Academy of Health Professionals at the Career and Tech Center uh and certificate ceremony for Child Development and Early Education Engineering at the Career and Tech Center. So far, nobody is slated to attend that. Uh Wednesday, May 20th. Wow, Wednesday, May 20th. There's a lot going on. Springfield Hospital cent's 130th anniversary celebration. Commissioners Gordon and Kyler, I'll be there. probably been RSVP two months ago and we've got a citation. Okay, there's a citation that's been been prepared for them. All right. A historical society of Carol County board meeting, Cockis Tavern, Westminster with Commissioner Gordon. Uh certificate ceremony for biomedical criminal justice building maintenance at Carroll County Career and Tech Center. Uh followed by the Carol County Community College Board of Trustees meeting in the great hall with Commissioner Kyler. 7:00 p.m. uh certificate ceremony for cosmetology interactive media at the Career and Tech Center. Uh the Emergency Services Advisory Council at 7:00 p.m. with Commissioner Garin. And then at 7:00 p.m. New Windsor fire and host company number one parade in New Windsor. Uh Thursday, May 21st, 8:00 a.m. closed uh admin for the Board of Commissioners, followed by open session for the Board of Commissioners at 9:00 a.m. Item number one, priority Carol. Item number two, FY27 budget adoption. So that's the that's the big budget vote. Uh 10:00 I'm sorry, 10 o'clock a.m. followed by item number three, uh briefing discussion, introduction to water resources elements and I would imagine that is where we will do the work
session on roads if we can fit it in. Uh followed by public comments, admin open and agenda review. Friday, May 22nd, Carroll County Farm Museum annual Yes. And did you say uh the the self storage? Oh, I apologize. Will be added to also. Thank you very much for the reminder. So, the self storage discussion will also be on Thursday, May 28th. Thank you very much, Commissioner Ker. Um uh followed by admin open agenda review. Friday, May 22nd, Carol County Farm Museum annual volunteer dessert tea. Commissioners Gordon and Kyler and I may attend that depending on how my schedule works out. Uh Saturday, May 23rd, nothing on the formal calendar. And then Sunday, May 24th, I have the podcast. Does anybody have any changes or corrections to the second week? Hearing none, we need a motion to adjurnn. So moved. We have a motion. Is there a second? Second. All those in favor? I. All those opposed? Motion carries. I just want to mention one if if we on the
This transcript was automatically generated from the official public meeting video and is presented unedited. It reflects remarks made on the public record by elected officials, staff, and public commenters. Transcript accuracy may vary; view the original recording for reference.