County Council - Regular Meeting

Tuesday, January 13, 2026
Transcript
Video
Agenda

About this meeting

Government Body
County Council
Meeting Type
County Council
Location
Lexington County, SC
Meeting Date
January 13, 2026

Transcript

810 sections (from 875 segments)

10:09 – 10:360

First off, I need to read this. All Lexington County committees are being broadcast live on Lexington County Spectrum channel 13 o two in Lexington County's website meeting portal. The committee meetings filmed today will be available for viewing anytime on demand at our county website. First thing is, item number five first, approval of South Carolina Department of Commerce locate South Carolina site enhancement grant. Eric Drudado. Good

10:361

afternoon. Before I get started,

10:382

I just wanna

10:383

hope everybody had a Merry Christmas. Happy New Year.

10:404

It's You

10:412

too. So

10:415

thank you.

10:443

As aware, the committee is approved to

10:462

and council approved Executive session.

10:49 – 11:283

Approved to apply for several site enhancement grants with the South Carolina Department of Commerce. There was $80,000,000 set aside for site enhancement initiatives through the Department of Commerce and we applied for several of them. We did get feedback in about mid December that we were awarded one of those and so we are seeking the approval to accept those funds. These funds are to cover some of the costs to purchase a property for product development to market for economic development and we were awarded 2,125,000 for that grant. So we're seeking approval to

11:286

Why would we not make the motion to accept it?

11:330

To approve. Anybody? Second. I make a motion to

11:361

approve seconded.

11:37 – 12:150

Michael Bishop made second. Any discussion left? All those in favor? Anybody opposed? Motion passes. Next up, approval of 10/14/2025 meeting minutes. Move to approve. Second. Motion to approve by councilman Brigham. Second by councilman Bishop. Any questions, deletions, additions? All those approve. And by opposed. Motion passes. Approval of 11/18/2025 meeting minutes. To approve. Second. Motion by mister Brigham to approve. Councilman Bishop second. Any questions, additions, deletions?

12:16 – 12:430

All those approved? Anybody opposed? Motion passes. Next up, executive session contract negotiations, South Carolina code 30Dash470, economic development with Garrett Gano. And also a second item, executive session for proposed business and industry location or and or expansion. South Carolina code 30 four seventy. Economic development. Garrett Gagano again. Alright. We'll be in About an hour.

12:436

An hour. That's your motion.

12:44 – 12:550

That's a motion. I'm gonna make the motion. Mister Brigham in second. All those approved? Anybody opposed? Motion passes. They'll be by the hour.

13:336

With, no votes to be taken, and we are adjourned.

13:392

But we're at planning now. We are at planning now. That'd be a consensus. 60 acres.

13:491

No. The 25 is. Know.

13:592

Text me. 19 no.

14:000

10 to 20 fives out there.

14:044

So only 10 to 20 fives out there.

14:062

It was January.

14:080

You come see Daryl.

14:142

I brushed my teeth.

14:156

Oh, there.

14:165

It's I

14:164

brushed my teeth. I'm a go.

14:212

Alright. Here's some Here.

14:267

First staff.

14:288

Yep. I

14:285

think we got it.

14:309

Ready, Lynn?

14:325

I think it's real bad.

14:371

Was it hurt, but it is. Hey.

14:39 – 14:509

Alright. The planning committee now is in session. We have three items on the agenda. The first item on the agenda is approval of 10/14/2025 meeting minutes.

14:517

Make a motion

14:521

to approve.

14:536

Motion to approve.

14:54 – 15:159

Seconded. Motion by Charlie to approve. Second by Cliff Fisher. Any questions? All in favor? Any opposed? Motion is approved. Next is approval for the 11/18/2025 meeting minutes. Do I have a motion to approve?

15:157

I make a motion to approve the meeting minutes.

15:189

Moved by Charlie Wessinger. I'll

15:201

second that.

15:21 – 15:529

Second by Cliff Fisher. Any questions? All in favor? Any opposed? Request is approved. The last item is a discussion of possible vote on ordinance twenty five zero seven amendments to the land development manual section six two nine allowable disturbance acres. Planning commission recommendation with community development, Robbie Derrick, and Matt Rowland, land development manager. Welcome.

15:52 – 17:0010

Thank you, members of council. Happy New Year. I think everybody's aware we've been going through the process since late last year regarding discussions of the allowed limits of disturbance within our land development manual. In November, the Planning Commission initially took up review for ordinance twenty five zero seven, which again the proposed changes to the LDM with limits of disturbance and just a reminder to counsel, some bullet points items of what was initially discussed in the draft text for Ordinance 2,507, It was revised the minimal acres of residential commercial disturbance to 25 rather than 20 acres without an expanded master plan and disturbance stabilization agreement. It's allowed potentially up to 40 acres with an expanded master plan and disturbance stabilization agreement for residential with provisions of engineering justification to have a maximum of 50 acres disturbed across multiple phases, require the 80% stabilization for residential projects to increase beyond the disturbance areas, allow cash surety for disturbance and stabilization agreements and EMPs require five additional best management practices as noted in our text.

17:01 – 17:5010

The site conditions warrant which type of EMPs should be utilized and have to be approved at staff level. Notification signs is required on-site, required use of mulch filter berms with silt fence, interbreeding curtains for certain situations to protect water sources, allow projects disturbing over the EMP threshold but less than 75 acres to go to Stormwater Advisory Board and Planning Commission for a variance approval process, allow project 75 acres or more to go to the Suave, PC, and County Council for a variance approval. Corrective action plans could be implemented in advance of an approved correction action plan, provided staff and the engineer could authorize this and BMP is not correctly installed result in automatic stop work order. Again, that's just the highlights of the initial draft text. Obviously, some things have changed and some some wording has changed as we've gone through this process.

17:51 – 18:2610

On November 20, again, Planning Commission convened and reviewed the initial draft text for orders twenty five zero seven. After discussion, the Planning Commission deferred it back to the Stormwater Advisory Board to offer a recommendation for this proposed changes. Stormwater Advisory Board met on December 10 and staff reported the Stormwater Advisory Board's information to the Planning Commission back on December 18. So quickly, just some highlights from Stormwater Advisory Board and from the Planning Commission. From the Stormwater Advisory Board, they asked staff to review some minor language corrections.

18:26 – 19:0810

There was some language that really need to be cleaned up. Their comments was commercial. They were consistent for staff up to 75 and over 75 acres approval by the Schwab and County Council. For residential, they felt staff up to 50, over 50, but up to 75 would be a Stormwater Advisory Board and County Council review similar to a variance process. They believe that BMPs, having an immediate stop work order if not installed correctly, should have a seven day corrective action for improperly stalled BMPs and there's some language regarding potential of the bonding language to make sure that there's no conflicts with the bonding within the residential subdivision regulations and within the land development manual.

19:08 – 20:0110

Reporting to the Planning Commission, the Planning Commission convened and their comments and recommendations back to County Council was to include a sensitivity checklist, identifying sensitive areas as part of the review process so the engineer calls those out and they're clearly identified. There are obvious concerns about further protecting Lake Murray and all bodies of water and tributaries to Lake Murray. They too were in agreements with the Soil Motor Advisory Board offering a no stop work order fee initially if the BMPs were not installed correctly and having a seven day grace period also. They believe the additional BMP's included within the draft text were a positive impact. The discussion on the acreage, they believe the acreage project size which is throughout the entire 25, fifty, seventy five appeared to be arbitrary and the 75 acres was a concern.

20:02 – 20:5010

As we explained to the Planning Commission, I know there's been a lot of talk and discussion about 75 acres, where that number came from. As council recalls, when we started the process back earlier in the fall, there was a twenty five and fifty and the discussion included the concerns if a variance would be necessary especially for our economic development projects. So for discussion purposes, 75 was put in as a rational jump from 2,050 to 75. Even in committee, I believe it was discussed, we were not sure if that was the right number or not but we're gonna leave it in there for discussion purposes as we went through this process. As directed by from to staff with the proposed changes from the Stormwater Advisory Board and from the Planning Commission, staff went ahead and proposed draft text addressing their comments.

20:51 – 21:1710

Within your packet, there's draft 2,507 reflecting again both Stormwater Advisory Board and Planning Commission comments and also the comments from staff basically clarifying some of the language. Anything highlighted in yellow are the staff clarification points, basically cleaning up some language. Anything in blue is recommended from Stormwater Advisory Board. Anything in red is recommended from the Planning Commission. So if you all allow, I will go through this section by section.

21:19 – 22:1110

Under 2.6.9 under residential, Again, staff is just cleaning up disturbance and stabilization agreement advising that all components of that must be installed including the cash surety or a letter of credit should a portion of initial disturbance achieve 80% density, not consistency. The land development manual specific saying the density of stabilization, not consistency, so we did that for clarification. We also included the engineer of record shall also ensure the approved sequence of construction is being followed for the project to advance when that stabilization is completed. Again, cleaning up the language in no instance shall allow limits of service exceed 50 acres as we did include some variance processes if it is exceeds 50 acres, so that's why you'll see that struck. Under

22:112

75 acres, I can't has been struck, correct?

22:14 – 22:3010

75 acres is still in there. I'll get that in just a second, Councilman Husson. Under commercial projects, from 60 to 75 is the minimum threshold that staff can review and approve under an expanded master plan and that is in blue. That came from the storm water advisory board.

22:3211

From say that one more time, from 60 From to 70

22:36 – 23:2610

commercial, it used to be the current Texas 60 is a threshold that can be approved at staff level with the disturbance stabilization agreement and an expanded master plan. 75 is the number that was discussed throughout the process with Stormwater Advisory Board and that's at the staff level. We included the stabilization portion just as we did with residential for commercial. Under expanded master plan, talking about the various types of additional best management practices or BMPs for our discussion, of course, there's five additional BMPs that are required for expanded master plan when it exceeds the 25 acre thresholds. The additional language that talks about the greater than 15% slopes of soil types to proximity, that was included already.

23:26 – 24:1110

Staff did include the protection of Lake Murray and its tributaries shall be taken in consideration when the additional BMPs are identified and designed by the design engineer. Going through the various BMPs, question and comments came up about the the impervious area versus pervious area and the additional BNP regarding that. One from the Stormwater Advisory Board was to reduce the total master plan development, that's the entire developed area, to less than 50% impervious surface. Engineer of record shall identify the areas deemed impervious as certain storm water features may not be considered and or calculated as pervious surfaces. Some of your pond features may be holding water so they would be technically pervious.

24:114

That would be wet pond. Right?

24:1310

It could be some part of the detention ponds because they can hold water for what, seventy two hours. So they may be considered pervious.

24:214

There was some I never really gave that consideration that a wet full pond would be considered impervious. Yes. That's EPA stuff. Right?

24:32 – 25:1710

Moving forward in red again is the planning commission's recommendation. In the section where it talks about the additional B and Ps for waters of The United States or the state, we did include the engineer of record shall specifically identify these areas in conjunction with our new plan review checklist which has been implemented over the past few months for residential and engineering plan reviews. Detailed measures and documentation are required to identify how the specific BMPs or other measures will be utilized to ensure water quality protection, especially for any disturbance that may be within 50 feet of these areas. The reason we use 50 feet, 50 feet is a common distance already referenced in the Land Development Manual for water quality buffers and special protection areas. We use that for consistency.

25:21 – 25:5910

This is the part where it comes into the variance process. This is in blue, so this is Stormwater Advisory Board. Residential developments that need to disturb more than the 50 acre threshold but less than 75 and commercial developments that need to disturb more than the 75 acre threshold shall be presented to the Stormwater Advisory Board and County Council for review and consideration. The final approval by County Council including all stipulations that would be part of the project submittal for the staff approval. The final approval for disturbance by county council should include a minimum of the E and P criteria, which is that's the additional best management practices plus additional criteria for each additional acre disturbed.

25:59 – 26:2410

So there may be some additional items you look at as far as the way the project advances, additional BNP, stabilization, etcetera. In all instances, the engineer of record shall provide justification as to the need to expand beyond the threshold limits. No development shall advance past any land disturbance threshold without achieving proper stabilization. The proper stabilization is the 80% that's previously referenced in this section.

26:251

That is the

26:2510

various process for commercial and residential and these were the suggestions from the Stormwater Advisory Board, I e that's why they are listed in blue.

26:342

I see. But I You're right. The last

26:37 – 27:0410

changes include the notice of violations. Previously, a stop work order was to be issued immediately following a best management practices that were improperly installed, maintained or implemented. Again, the recommendation from Planning Commission and the Stormwater Advisory Board, we changed that to an immediate notice of violation which is a notice and given them a seven day deadline to go in and complete the corrections to those BMPs.

27:044

Seven calendar day.

27:05 – 27:3710

A seven calendar day. That's correct. The land development manager or his or designee reserves the right in all cases to require the engineer of record to certify that the BMPs have been installed correctly and per approved plans. We felt that was another good tool not only from staff to review it to have their their licensed professional engineer also certify that those BMPs were installed correctly. And again, this has taken the draft text that was presented at the public hearing and including those proposed changes both from the Planning Commission and Stormwater Advisory Board for discussion this afternoon.

27:402

Who's the chair? Who's the chair?

27:426

May I speak?

27:43 – 27:572

Yeah. Robbie, under the notice of violation, a stop work order, the way I understand it, we if we have a violation, we can do a stop work order. They're asking for seven days to correct it. Is that correct?

27:5710

That's correct.

27:57 – 28:152

Yes, sir. Okay. That's, you know, it's a water we're we're dealing with water, and we're probably dealing with a stormy time when the violation occurs. And usually that water in South Carolina is either, you know, what do you call them? A burst.

28:15 – 28:432

What do y'all call them? Microburst. Microburst, which creates quite a problem. Us giving somebody seven days to correct the problem seems counterintuitive of what we're trying to do. I mean, if we've got if we've got red clay dumping into water right now, at this second, it's gonna continue to dump until we stop it and giving them seven days based on history.

28:43 – 29:342

And I can only speak for myself being the public works chairman based on history. If we don't have it done today, it may tell you where where I wanna be would like to be, and I think I'm speaking for most of the people on this council. I want the people to worry about it as much as I do. I want the people who are doing the building around our waterways, our Lake Murray, our rivers, and our neighbors to worry about when a big rain comes, are we flooding our neighborhood and neighbors and rivers and blah blah blah. And by seven days, I just don't think that in my personal take, I don't think that's fair.

29:344

What's a good time to think, Daryl?

29:362

Yeah. You know, I I don't know the answer but seven days is too long.

29:40 – 29:514

How about if we say an event happened on a Friday afternoon, so you had Friday, Saturday, Sunday, that's three days gone. Right. And you'd want them to be there no later than Monday morning. Yeah. If if they're not. Right. And some of them I

29:512

prefer them to be there

29:524

that day. Uh-huh. That's perfect world. Right. That's but

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I know it's not a person

29:562

of these.

29:574

Right. So four days reasonable?

30:0011

I think that's too many.

30:017

I think

30:024

that's Four is too many?

30:03 – 30:4011

I mean, I think seventy two hours. If it's that kind of a situation where you're dumping clay into a waterway or something, I mean, you're out in the middle of BFE and a water line breaks and property's flooding, that's not quite the same situation as if our waterways are being destroyed by clay that's going in there. So I would think if it's an emergency and we do have a situation like that after a big rainstorm or hurricane happens to come through Lexington County like it does once every twenty years, I think at that point, it becomes more urgent. And whose call is that to say, you gotta get out there today?

30:4010

Matt, you wanna relay what the responsibilities

30:434

are to do? We to figure it out

30:442

if this

30:454

even happened. If

30:4610

it's a if it's a major event, what what their responsibilities are?

30:4912

It's a major rain event. They're they're supposed to immediately go out there and fix it anyway.

30:5411

Writing somewhere?

30:5512

That's in the

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manual. Say it was that out so out loud?

31:0012

Supposed to go out immediately after any rain event. Any rain event that's gonna cause that kind of issue.

31:042

Yeah. But that but that's not been happening.

31:067

We know that doesn't happen.

31:0812

So if it happens on a weekend, obviously, our inspectors aren't here to to ensure that's happening.

31:112

Right. Right. Right. So here's just answered the the the problem.

31:17 – 31:5310

So, Robbie, how many of these violations you've issued are being off-site or on-site problems? Vast majority that we've had in the last two years have been for stop work orders have been a out of sequence. I'd say 50% to 60% are out of sequence, meaning they've advanced the site without doing some type of BMP install or outside their limits of disturbance. Beyond that, the next most common ones are offside impacts, failure to to meet an NOV process. So if there's been a notice of violation, just continue to appoint there as a stop report.

31:531

So we've had very few of these bad ones when they're bad. I said the word bad.

31:578

Right.

31:581

So, I mean What's your

32:002

what's your feeling on that?

32:011

I'm saying most of the time and from the fifty years that we did it, nobody likes that. So three days is plenty.

32:106

I mean,

32:102

you said

32:111

said, we should the next morning. Hours. Yeah. It's usually fixed the next morning.

32:152

See, here's a guy that did it for a living. That's the kind of worry I want. That's the kind of worry we want.

32:21 – 32:3411

I have a follow-up question. So okay. So you're telling me that we're the sixth largest county in the state and we don't have anybody on call on the weekends if there's a crisis that comes through here that you can call and say, hey, you need to get out here and fix this?

32:3510

No. I have that availability in our department currently.

32:3711

Well, somebody needs to fix that.

32:421

Hey. One other problem is you could never go out to all the sites in Lexington County.

32:4711

call 247. My phone rings, and it's a constituent. I gotta answer the call.

32:511

But you could never, as an inspector one inspector on call could not ride all the sites in Lexington. Yeah. I don't know if you can do it in a week.

32:594

Don't expect

32:5911

them to

33:0013

ride all

33:0011

the sites in Lexington. I feel

33:022

I it's like they

33:0211

can pick the phone call whoever's in that site and say, hey. You're working on this. Get out there.

33:071

But I think the contractors are are responsible enough to do this.

33:127

We had a really large rain event and a road, Lake Tide

33:171

was a storm drainage problem with the DOT.

33:197

Oh, no. It it was more. There were more things involved in that. And that entire road flooded, and that was it had never flooded before.

33:271

Bobby investigated that. And what did you find? Yeah.

33:307

There was the

33:3110

respond on that one. That's one of leak

33:327

There was a notice of violation that was issued.

33:341

Oh, I'm sure.

33:355

It had to do

33:3610

with the utility crossing, utility improvements for a subdivision. I think it has some stabilization issues. Right.

33:432

But I was let's get back to this issue. Seventy two hours. We got a guy right here who says it's the business seventy two hours to answer your question. Seventy two hours

33:521

Cut it out.

33:522

Is your suggestion. I think seventy two hours in my personal view.

33:571

I mean, I'm know, I'm not on this committee. Mean, you have an opinion. You have an opinion.

34:042

I mean, I'm not yeah. I it's an opinion. An I would trust Clifford. I would that's exactly what I do.

34:099

Seventy two would be fair. There you go.

34:107

So with with the seventy hours and a notice of violation, are there any teeth that need to be added to a notice of violation, or the seventy two hours is enough teeth, and then it goes into a stop work order?

34:1910

Seventy two hours is up, it would then immediately go to a stop work order.

34:222

Yeah. Now here's the flip side. Now what what we've done is so good. We've added all these additional BMPs.

34:291

Right. Yes.

34:30 – 34:432

Right? So so we've gone from no BMPs, you know, just a basic we we we've added all these BMPs. Now we've got some teeth. Now we've got some urgency, and I think that will fix hopefully

34:4311

You know what? For the audience and all the cameras that seem to be in here today, maybe somebody should explain what a BMP is.

34:492

Basic management practice. Yeah. A BMP,

34:52 – 35:0712

they they say they define it as a a best management practice. It's basically the best way to trap sediment, the best way to direct water into other BMP such as ponds in order to prevent erosion and sedimentation that we see on job sites.

35:0811

Thank you.

35:09 – 35:304

Hey. To follow-up what you said while I get bit about the sixth largest county, we don't have anybody on call. How about this? We've done enough research, I guess, for other counties. Do any of them have the standards of which we were putting together that you can find? I mean, I know I've I've I've watched the entire Schwab meeting. All hour and forty minutes of it.

35:30 – 35:4810

Planning commission and Schwab did ask staff if there were any other municipalities or jurisdictions or counties or even DHEC who handles a lot of storm water review for smaller municipalities and counties within the state if they had a maximum disturbance limit. No one else, even comparable jurisdictions has a maximum limits of disturbance.

35:484

Not not only that, but some of them even the standards that we've been talking about stock work orders and things like that, They don't even have that level of regulation or oversight.

35:5810

From what we can tell, ours are head and shoulders above other jurisdictions as far as our enforcement process.

36:034

We may be. We may be. I'm not saying we are. We may be one of the most, if not the most restrictive in the state according to what we've have got now through

36:1211

Well, there was a caveat with that that are comparable to us.

36:15 – 36:3110

Well, you've got some jurisdictions on the coast. They have other requirements through DS, the ocean coastal resource management requirements. So they've got more provisions in place especially for tributaries and wetlands, bays, etcetera, which are dictated by state government or state regulations.

36:314

Well, did you we'll just say Richland, Newberry, Fairfield, Saluda, Aiken and Calhoun. None have anything

36:3810

the Central Midlands, we probably have the most restrictive requirements for for land disturbance.

36:432

Applause. Most restrictive requirements.

36:459

Yes, sir.

36:462

Not restrictive requirements.

36:474

That's correct.

36:4812

Very correct.

36:50 – 37:117

So the limits of disturbing with the amount of acreage. I understand commercial is a little bit different than residential. With this and the areas surrounding the lake, and I'm not just talking about District 6, I'm talking about all areas that surround the lake, is there any way we can have a caveat in here where it does not exceed 30 acres?

37:1311

Just for the property surrounding the lake? Correct.

37:164

That's not what your planning commission or your swab, who's your technical board recommended.

37:217

Oh, I'm asking if we can do that.

37:24 – 37:4111

Well, we could probably do anything we wanna do. The better question here is is there people on this council that would vote in favor of there being that sort of an overlay is what you're saying for land clearance around the, Lake Murray Waterway. Yeah?

37:412

What are

37:419

you thinking? Like, a two mile?

37:44 – 38:007

Any any of the waterways that feed right into the lake to protect all of that and not clear more than 30 acres. And if you wanna put a distance on it or if you wanna put, like what we did before with the Lake Murray overlay, that boundary.

38:012

Use the Lake Murray overlay as

38:036

the boundary.

38:037

Use the Lake Murray overlay, the former one, as the boundary.

38:0710

We need to be extremely careful because this is not a zoning ordinance. This is a land development manual and overlays are not identified to be used specifically in land development.

38:16 – 38:3510

We do have the ability to identify special protection areas. Some of those areas may include, like you said, tributaries, TMDL affiliated watersheds. So there are some methods that we could potentially look at from a staff level to identify areas that the council may well consider for those more restrictive.

38:367

We do that and identify those areas?

38:3910

If the body would like for us to, then we most certainly can.

38:424

Isn't there a didn't the planning commission speak to that?

38:46 – 39:1410

The planning commission did ask for a checklist to identify the the special protection areas. So we have a we developed a checklist with the engineers this past fall to help identify what they need to specifically include on their checklist and their submittals for review. And this will be an item that's added to that checklist that they have to specifically identify that these special protection areas and what they are specifically doing to ensure that they are protected as part of their their design process.

39:14 – 39:404

With with that being said, if we adopt and move forward with the changes recommended by the planning commission and the swab, which most time I think we have accepted their recommendations here in the last couple years. Through their recommendation form, wouldn't that do what Charlie's asking anyway to identify area around the lake for them to I think What what more specifically

39:40 – 40:0610

This would identify the special protection areas including this section. Waters of The United States, which are your Lake Murray, your perennial streams, some intermittent streams, rivers, TMDLs which are identified sensitive areas through watersheds. I think what councilman Wessinger is alluding to is identifying large areas to have more restrictive limits of clearing is what I think she's alluding to. Correct.

40:06 – 40:1711

Around the lake itself. And and do I understand you correctly, did you say that the land development manual doesn't provide for us to do that and therefore we prohibited from doing it?

40:1710

You're not prohibited from doing it. It's not considered an overlay. You have to identify a special protection area, which is more

40:2411

House around the lake would be a special protection area.

40:2610

Land development and water quality is watershed based, so most likely it's something we have to look at as far as watersheds that basically contribute or feed to the lake would probably be a suggestion we need to look at.

40:37 – 40:537

So I would like to suggest that before we approve this as written and suggested, I would like for us to go back and add that to go back and look at those protected areas and identify those for a lower level of clearing before we move forward with this.

40:545

And then we get

40:542

have the same thing that they asked that basically, the same thing they asked for.

40:589

So It's kind of already in there. Right? Mhmm.

41:00 – 41:131

Robbie. What portion of For a rainwater falls in Lexington County goes in Lake Murray? Not all of it. Oh, there's a ton of it. 50% of the county probably drains in Lake Murray?

41:13 – 41:5510

Well, I will give you all one example which is unique. I know we started this process back in September. We received a complaint from the river keeper about sedimentation within the Saluda River and staff spent two days trying to find the source of that sedimentation. Basically, was natural erosion. The only stop work order that we had issued for an off-site impact was within the watershed and that watershed was located in Gilbert. There's no way that that off-site impact would include that damage or that impact to the river. So these watersheds are very large. They do have a lot of area that does fall into some of these these these basins.

41:56 – 42:241

One thing you need to understand since everybody's fault that because I'm in the great was in the grading business. Okay. When you take, say, a 60 acre subdivision, you have to do it in 20 acre increments. It's not that easy of a statement to say because until you realize what it takes to do every phase of that. Most of the time, the pond is dug first, and then you can clear that 20 acres.

42:24 – 43:031

So that takes two different kinds of equipment in and out on a lowboy. Then you gotta stockpile that dirt from the pond so it never gets in place and so you start doing the subdivision. I'm cutting this short. But every phase, water takes different equipment. Sewer takes different equipment. Paving and putting the road in does is good for equipment. So when you divide it three times, you got three times the traffic going up the road. You're moving the dirt two to three times. We're talking about housing costs. That's one reason it's so high is because you get paid every time you move the dirt.

43:04 – 43:341

So by moving the dirt one time, you also get the certain drainage areas. The the storm drainage is gonna pick the water up and take to the pond. So and the reason it picks it up, usually, the road is the implement for catching water. The roadway is a big part of the storm drainage. So until you pave the road and do all these drainage areas, that retention pond that was designed two years ago is the only started work then.

43:34 – 44:001

So we have created tremendous time of of problems with roads, with equipment going up and down, moving dirt couple times, stabilized. It's not as good as when it's all grassed and pretty. I agree with that. But you're because it's temporary sediment basins. You're really creating four times the work messing with the dirt.

44:00 – 44:271

None of this system is working until the 60 acres so called subdivision is through and the roads are paved and the retention pond has got pipe going to it. Water will not jump from the front of that site to the back. So environmentally Environmentally, you are doing it all the way it was designed, and your design does not come through permission, whatever it is, until the whole subdivision is finished.

44:28 – 45:004

Different to your point, I was at the last planning commission meeting and there are two of those members of both of which one is a retired DHEC employee and the other one worked there for a number of years. And to to what you're saying is what they wanted to be emphatic about it was is the longer the site stayed open, the longer it stays unstabilized, the more chances of events for things to happen to create stop work orders. That's why they wanted to be able to do it in a timely, speedy manner to keep from having these sites open for such a long

45:00 – 45:341

period of sequence all the time because the grading guy will move over here to do a little something to keep something from happening, but the engineer did not see on-site. It's impossible to draw something and go with the the texture of the dirt. Say the dirt was real wet. When you took out that pond, you're supposed to stockpile it, but there's no way to put it on two acres when it's running like soup. So you ended up using six acres to stop bylander. You get a letter, you get a violation. Well, you can't make soups stop running.

45:347

So I understand what you're saying. All I'm asking and, Robbie, you phrased Well, we have done that. Perfectly well. Can you please just say that again of what I was trying to do with the protected areas around Lake Murray?

45:4510

I think you're looking at for methods within areas around Lake Murray to have more restrictions or more protection for the lake is what you're looking at.

45:537

Right. And and lower limits of clearing around the lake in those protected areas.

45:58 – 46:244

And I think we can achieve that by putting this in order right now and following again the planning commission recommendations to continue to look at that and put it in place. This is nothing preventing this but all Yeah. Mean for us to take one sentence or two sentences and hold up everything from moving forward, it just makes no sense. If if you didn't watch the swab or the planning commission meeting, it's probably one of most informative that I've seen in a long time. Right.

46:24 – 46:544

As you had a very technical based people here in this very room, engineers, people that work in it every day just like he did for fifty years and listen to them talk. And and their assessment and the way they see how things should transition in sequence are far more liberal than what's being discussed here. The planning commission even had a open mind about it too to to taking the information they got from the technical committee. That's why they're there. That's why they were established.

46:54 – 47:057

Agreeance with that. All I'm asking is for some additional protective measures around the lake and the watershed and to reduce that from 50 acres down to 30 acres in those

47:054

We don't know the thirty's right.

47:067

In those designated areas.

47:074

I know thirty's right, Charlie. I think we'd throw it back to the swab and let them give us some advisement again just like they've given it to us now.

47:149

That's what I was gonna say.

47:157

Send it back to them again?

47:161

That's what I'm

47:17 – 47:339

gonna say around the lake. If it's a special special you know, if we need to look at it, we'll put restrictions in per project and look at it according to them looking at it and do a study on it to see if it needs that. Some areas might not need that protection. Right. Some areas do need it.

47:337

In terms of Can we we put that in with a particular acreage amount to be looked at

47:399

The acreage would be determined The would be determined by the project.

47:42 – 48:014

Then go and Yeah. And take this again as a subsection and we've got we've asked them to do this and they did exactly what we asked them to do. And I think we're compelled to take their recommendations and move on. I mean, I think the other thing will tell me on councilors think we have wanna go against the planning commission.

48:017

Can we get it identified?

48:031

You can't I

48:062

think we're we're missing the point. It may be and I'm not on the committee. They've already asked for that information. Okay. So

48:137

So do we have that?

48:1410

Yes. They hadn't got it.

48:162

We just they do meet the meeting just happened.

48:18 – 48:482

So they've asked Robbie them to to identify that area Correct. Which is the same area you're asking to identify. Once Robbie's crew identifies that area, which they've asked to identify that area, then they will discuss them will discuss what they ask about, then we can continue that conversation about land land disturbance at that point. They've asked that question. Yeah. So they're very curious too because they're concerned

48:486

about land quarrel.

48:497

So we need to get that information back to add

48:5111

to that.

48:514

That's it.

48:522

We can get the information back to them so they can review it.

48:5511

So Can I say something?

48:568

Go ahead, Beth.

48:5811

Do you wanna finish up?

48:592

Go ahead.

49:004

I just

49:01 – 49:4011

wanna throw this out there because it it just strikes me as so very odd. Maybe I'm I'm in my backwards thinking, but a whole lot of beautiful neighborhoods in Lexington County that are still the most desired neighborhoods in Lexington County were built without clear cutting property, acreages of properties. They went in, they laid the roads, they started putting infrastructure in and they went lot by lot to build a home. They didn't cut down trees, they didn't smooth out lots, They certainly didn't clear cut 60 acres of property to lay infrastructure for a neighborhood that will never look like that property did again. So while I respect you

49:411

No. I know you've been doing saying, do you know do you know why it's changed?

49:4411

I do know why

49:451

it's changed. Water. Storm water requirements has changed. They're right there. Robbie's shaking his head.

49:5011

Yeah. But that didn't happen until they started desiring to clear cut and storm water became a huge problem.

49:571

The problem. You go through these subdivision. They only have curb and gutter. They don't have a retention pond that you're talking about. They have none

50:044

of that.

50:0511

I've lived in two of them. We never really had any flooding.

50:079

I would I would say storm water is probably more controlled by clear cutting because you can direct the flow of water.

50:1311

Only since we started clear cutting and adding new subdivisions which added more potential of concrete for storm water to run on.

50:211

Correct. I do have

50:22 – 50:369

one question. To go above the 50 acres, that does have to go back to storm water and to council. I just wanna be clear on that. That's not just to give me 75 acres. That's special provisions with permission, and stormwater has to prove any staff here. That's correct.

50:36 – 51:0110

That's commercial. No. That's residential. Commercial residential is over 50 to 75. That's that process. If it's commercial, it's above 75. That's not And and I think the comments and discussion with that was goes back to the original language that we put in place, what, four, five years ago. There were more restrictions on residential because those projects tend to take longer than it was commercial. That's why residential commercial had a larger threshold

51:011

Right.

51:01 – 51:1710

For disturbance. And it's a similar similar conversation and discussion with with the SWAB on that. The commercial sites usually completed within twelve to eighteen months. You've got your infrastructure already in, so it helps defer and and, handle some of that stormwater and stabilization issues very quickly.

51:179

I mean, I think we have pretty strong protections in place to keep the and we could shut them down if they get out of.

51:267

I'd still like to see some more comeback before we approve those those protection areas if possible.

51:329

I mean, I think we have them in place.

51:334

It's all in place right

51:349

It's going to storm storm water and planning.

51:377

And They're not identified yet.

51:38 – 52:0410

Correct? Not identified yet within this text because it's the limits of clearing. We can go back if if this body would like for us to to look at other method methods for special protection areas. I know we've gone through, we've been working for to overhaul the entire land development manual for the last four or five years. So we have been discussing some things like that through that process. So if we need to report something back, then yes, we certainly can.

52:047

That's If

52:054

we move forward to what we've got from the form of two of our appointed bodies today, we can amend this.

52:129

I just wanna say, we go ahead and approve it and then have them amend and put your special they're gonna

52:161

do it.

52:1710

And it can be amended at any time.

52:1815

That's correct.

52:194

It could be amended. Mister chairman, I'm gonna make a motion that we approve what's been submitted to us by the Schwab and the Planning Commission. I'll second it.

52:279

Alright. Todd Cullum has asked to vote on it and Cliff Fisher is second. We're gonna go ahead and take a vote on it. Robbie?

52:3710

Do we need to amend the seven days to seventy two hours? Seven days to be included as part of

52:429

that motion. And I would like to, you know, work on identifying and make amendments to that and have Charlie's input. We'll definitely work

52:4910

with council one Westinger on that.

52:51 – 53:054

I think if if this passes that we as we continue to move forward, we prepare to get this sent back again to the swab. Let them make the recommendation back to us again. I mean, that's the the more trusted body between the two, technically.

53:06 – 53:2610

Most likely, what we'll do is moving forward with direction from counsel is we'll provide some options and I think since councilwoman Wessinger is very familiar with the lake and the concerns with the lake, we'll work with her specifically to get some draft language back to council, then we'll start that process again, which will include stormwater advisory board and planning commission.

53:260

I think Charlie just wants to wait a couple weeks to see what we can come up

53:291

with and do

53:290

it one time.

53:307

That's that's right. Just wait a little bit longer to get the information before we just jump in and approve this.

53:371

Let's just get some of it done.

53:399

I mean, Charlie, are you okay if we approve it and you're gonna work and make these amendments? It's gonna about it. We're gonna I feel confident we're gonna get the amendments fixed to your satisfaction.

53:494

They're gonna come back with a recommendation.

53:517

So why not just wait?

53:524

Because we can move forward.

53:539

Move forward and get this behind us because this has been on for months.

53:574

Move on. Get this done. And it's been a year.

54:026

Call for the vote.

54:03 – 54:209

Go ahead and call for the vote. All in favor? Any opposed? Alright. Approval on the request approved, and that is gonna be it for the planning committee.

54:2015

Robbie.

54:227

Thank you. Can we meet next week to start working on this immediately?

54:282

That's Page, brother.

54:330

Alright. Called to order the administration committee seeking

54:3710

approval

54:370

of 11/18/2025 meeting minutes.

54:406

Move to approve November.

54:4310

I've moved by

54:44 – 54:550

councilman Bishop. Second. Second by council lady Carrig. Any discussion? All those in favor? Anybody opposed? Motion passes. We are adjourned.

55:016

Call to order health and human services committee. We have, two sets of minutes, 10/28/2025, seek approval.

55:122

So moved.

55:1311

Second. So

55:156

who got who's the second?

55:162

Both of

55:178

Who's got the one.

55:184

We're not gonna lose a quorum, are we?

55:202

I bet Charlie was first. Alright.

55:226

She made made alright. Charlie Wessinger made the motion. I'm looking to who made the second.

55:262

It had to be him. Okay.

55:28 – 55:406

Todd Cullum made the second. Any questions, alterations? All in favor? All opposed? Motion passes. We have November 18 meeting minutes. Move to approve.

55:407

Second.

55:418

Okay. We have

55:41 – 55:546

Hudson was the, motion. Westsinger was the second. Any discussion, changes, deletions? All in favor? All opposed? Motion passes. Okay. So we got that out of

55:542

the way.

55:55 – 56:066

Now we have, Library Services and Technology tuition reimbursement grant award for S. Smith, Kelly Poole Library Services. It's all yours.

56:06 – 56:4316

Thank you. Good afternoon. We recently received information that we were awarded a grant on behalf of staff member Summer Smith. This is a tuition reimbursement grant. Summer's been employed with us at Lexington Main Library in the Reference Department. She recently graduated with her library science degree. The grant award would reimburse her for part of her tuition costs. We're just the conduit for this. There's no out of cost out of pocket costs for the library nor the county. They would reimburse her up to $2,894 And that is my request.

56:432

Okay. I move that we accept.

56:46 – 56:596

We have a motion by councilman Dudson. Who's the second? Second. Second. Councilman Wessinger. Any, discussion? All in favor? All opposed? Motion passes. I'll vote for vote. One.

57:00 – 57:3316

Very similar request. This one is an identical, grant opportunity. We were notified of an award on behalf of Jayjree Webster. Ms. Webster works at our KC West Columbia branch and has been with us almost six years. She's just begun library school, and so we're really excited about the opportunity for her to continue her career with us. The grant award would reimburse her up to 66% or $1,301 of her last semester cost. There's no out of pocket costs nor the library or the county, and that's my request.

57:342

Remooney, Kelly. That's it. That's it. Move to approve for miss Webster.

57:384

Second. Alright.

57:391

We have

57:40 – 58:016

a motion by councilman Hudson, second by councilman Cullum. Any questions? All in favor? All opposed? Motion passes. Thank you, Kelly. Alright. Let's see. Here we are. Alright. We have approval to accept EMS grant and aid award emergency services chief Megan Hallman.

58:01 – 58:2017

Thank you. Good afternoon. EMS been has been awarded $22,632 through the Department of Public Health EMS grant and aid. The grant the grant does require a 5% 5.5% match. These funds have been accounted for in the current budget. Staff requests these grant funds be approved to be utilized in two training initiatives.

58:212

So we're getting $22,000, and we have to participate 5%.

58:2617

Mhmm. With the 5% is $22,000.

58:282

I I move to approve.

58:306

Alright. I have a motion by councilman Hudson, second by councilwoman Wessinger. Any questions, comments?

58:374

I just have one for the chief. Good afternoon.

58:4017

Good afternoon.

58:414

This emergency vehicle operation training, now is that for the entire staff?

58:4717

That's for entire staff and new staff bringing in this year.

58:504

Yes. That's just on a yearly basis. Is that right?

58:534

Okay. Great. Thank you.

58:556

That'd be all. Mr. Kellen, that's all.

58:594

Yeah. I just wondered if everybody was gonna be subject to the drain.

59:026

Okay. Alright. All in favor? All opposed? Motion passes. Alright. We have a second item. Ahead.

59:10 – 59:2817

EMS has been awarded a total of $45,576.23 through the house hospital preparedness program. This grant does not require the county to provide a match and is reimbursable. Staff requests these grant funds be approved to be utilized in a regional training program and a replacement shelter for RMET.

59:2811

Move to approve.

59:306

K. I have a motion to approve by councilwoman Carrigg. Second. Second by councilman Hudson. Any questions, comments? All in favor? All opposed? Motion passes.

59:4011

Thank you.

59:40 – 59:526

Thank you. Okay. Now we have approval to accept twenty twenty five Walmart Spark Good Local Grant award. Fire chief Kyle Minnick. Good

59:523

afternoon, mister Chair.

59:52 – 1:00:1215

Members of council, council approved Lexington County Fire to apply for the Walmart Spark Good Grant in the amount of $5,000 for a no match for our fire investigative unit. We were awarded $2,300 to be used for equipment, for that team to help, do fire investigations where on the county.

1:00:122

I'm gonna move to approve the accepted $2,300.

1:00:166

Second. I have a motion by councilman Hudson, second by councilman Carrig. Any questions or comments? Now we've used this grant funding before. Right? Yes, sir.

1:00:2515

We we applied last year and received it for smoke alarms at that time. So this time,

1:00:3118

the same group applied, but to put

1:00:3215

it for the fire prevention bureau for their fire investigations.

1:00:356

Keep your eyes on that one. Seems like it comes around pretty often.

1:00:3815

Yes, sir.

1:00:38 – 1:00:546

Alright. All in favor? All opposed? Alright. Motion Now we have discussion and possible vote on contract for nine eleven nine one one communications radio consoles. Deputy administrator, Lucky Doo.

1:00:5413

Good afternoon, counsel. We're here

1:00:574

today to talk about a

1:00:59 – 1:01:2713

to ask you guys to move forward with a contract relating to a nine one one communication radio console project. Our current radio consoles at the nine one one communication center out on Ballpark Road and in our backup facility here at the County Administration Building will be reaching end of life by 2030. The current ones that we have are about twenty five years old and are just reaching end of life.

1:01:29 – 1:02:1813

replace these radios by end of life, this project would have to start by at least 2028. Motorola is expecting most nine one one communication centers to wait until about the 2028 year to do these projects. And so we have been talking with them, and they have offered us a significant discount if we were to go ahead and engage in a contract to move forward with this project now. This is about a three this project at full cost is around $3,054,000. They have offered us a discount of $454,585.28 if we move forward with the project now.

1:02:19 – 1:02:5713

The that would bring the total cost of the project to $2,710,354.78. I will also say we have been engaged in this conversation for close to a year with them. We had a cost estimate in May 2025, and since that, we received an updated one in November 2025 and the cost had gone up over $200,000. Due to inflationary cost increases, tariffs have played an impact greatly in the technology realm. These costs are projected to continue to go up over the next few years.

1:02:59 – 1:03:4113

We also to bring up another point, we had a radio console go down for over six months, and it was down that long because we could not find the pieces and parts needed to make the repairs because they are no longer making those pieces and parts. So, one of the big points that I'd like to bring up is there would be no impact on this current budget if we were to move forward now. This would be something we would budget for the fiscal year 2627. There are sufficient funds in our nine one one state allocated fund to pay for this project. And again, there would be no impact to the general fund whatsoever.

1:03:42 – 1:04:1313

This project will replace and install 32 total new radio consoles, 24 at our primary nine one one center on Ballpark Road and eight here at the backup center. The reason we're seeking approval to move forward with the contract today is to take advantage of the significant discount being offered to move forward now, but it will also allow them to go ahead and order the equipment so it's ready to ship and install shortly after the new fiscal year begins. Any questions?

1:04:136

2.7, is that the figure you said? Two seven?

1:04:1713

Seven would be the final.

1:04:18 – 1:04:311

Plus the technology, you know, every time you buy something, it's already antiquated. That's what I was saying. I hate to say that. So by putting it all three years, does it Somewhat some new improvements and gonna last longer?

1:04:3213

So they expect the the life expectancy of the new system that they're going to put into place is going to be twenty years. And then, you know,

1:04:412

I think everybody on the committee is kinda of all, you're not because you've been involved in the studying of it. Right? But $2,700,000 for

1:04:511

how many radios? That would be a A

1:04:5413

total of 32.

1:04:552

Now would describe a console to me. Where is that as it laying somewhere? Or That

1:05:006

is what that is what

1:05:0213

the dispatcher has in front of them. That is the the computers.

1:05:061

I'm sure the new technology will show some different stuff on the screen that will help with dispatching.

1:05:1413

It it will. I mean, it's kind of a it'll be an improvement not only with the radio side of it, but the display side of it. It'll it'll be kind of a whole new improved.

1:05:231

Is there another competitor besides Motorola? Because I've dealt with them all the

1:05:2813

pretty much a monopolized

1:05:291

That's what I figured. Yeah. Because they have a little scam on all that stuff. I

1:05:352

didn't say that and it's hard. I did.

1:05:381

Everywhere you go, it's

1:05:402

That's something I

1:05:415

usually would say.

1:05:414

You could have said that.

1:05:422

have said that but I

1:05:449

Go ahead.

1:05:456

Help me out. Okay. Go on. So,

1:05:50 – 1:06:164

obviously, it's county wide services that we're and we're talking about sheriff's department, fire service, and EMS. Right? Now there are some other PSAPs in the county. Are they also gonna be subject to this program too or we should we include them? And the first two that come to my mind are West Columbia and Casey both have their own because they still do their own law enforcement because we are doing their fire and and always done their EMS. I'm not sure if Bakesport LEAS will

1:06:1613

They're still doing still have their own piece app as well.

1:06:194

So would we not try to get them included also within this the same contract?

1:06:2413

We could certainly reach out and have

1:06:254

It's a 13% reduction if if I heard your math right. So

1:06:2913

We could certainly reach out to them to let them know that we're moving forward with the contract, and we

1:06:351

could talk with our

1:06:3613

Motorola representative to see if they chose to jump on now. Could they possibly take advantage of the discount?

1:06:42 – 1:07:044

Is if if if we're gonna improve the communications within countywide services and leave those three jurisdictions out because of their law enforcement aspects of which I think we agreed many years ago that it was probably better that they do their law enforcement because they just know the lay of the and you're it's spending time in municipalities. You understand that too.

1:07:0413

Right? I think we were on opposite sides of the table last time

1:07:069

this was discussed with a

1:07:086

piece of

1:07:08 – 1:07:204

And then nobody wanted to put any money in it. But anyway, the long and short of that is that I really would like to see us include the municipalities in this too if we can and to bring them along them as in Motorola.

1:07:2013

And there may be an opportunity for them to take advantage of some savings by moving in conjunction with us.

1:07:272

And we may wanna consider if you have it, you probably already have. The New West Region's gonna need one, didn't it? I haven't

1:07:344

been to trucks.

1:07:356

No. I haven't been there in units. This is the EOC.

1:07:392

Gotcha. Alright. Well, I'm not gonna make the motion to make the either

1:07:446

do it now or the left cost 2.7 or wait two or three years at 4,000,000.

1:07:4911

So Approved.

1:07:501

Alright. Mister chair. This time, but not the other one by money.

1:07:544

Do you have a motion, mister chairman? Second.

1:07:556

Yeah. Who second? Best

1:07:574

I made the motion. I second. Alright.

1:07:596

Got a motion by councilwoman Carey. Got a second by, councilman Cullen. Any comments, concerns? All in favor? All opposed? Alright. Motion passes.

1:08:0810

Thank you.

1:08:096

Thank you, sir. Alright. We are adjourned.

1:08:1311

Alright. We're gonna call the justice committee to order, and I would seek a motion to approve the 10/14/2025 meeting minutes.

1:08:222

Move to approve. I think I'm under justice. Thank you. Yep.

1:08:27 – 1:08:3911

I have a motion by councilman Hudson and a second by councilman Fisher. Any comment or question? All in favor? Anyone opposed? Alright. I would seek a seek a motion to approve the 10/28/2025 meeting minutes.

1:08:392

So moved.

1:08:421

second it.

1:08:437

I'll second.

1:08:445

You're welcome.

1:08:45 – 1:08:5611

Alright. I have a motion by councilman Hudson and a second by councilman Fisher. All in favor? Anyone opposed? And last but not least, I would seek a motion to approve 11/18/2025 meeting minutes.

1:08:562

So move.

1:08:585

I'll go ahead and second it.

1:09:0011

A motion by councilman Hudson and a second by councilman Fisher. All in favor? Anyone opposed? Motion passes, and we're adjourned.

1:09:07 – 1:09:302

Good job, miss Gerrick. Always. Of course, it's now open. Seeking a motion to approve the, the minutes of say approval of October 14. Move to approve. I have a motion by mister Brigham, second by mister Fisher. All in favor? All opposed?

1:09:31 – 1:09:572

good. Approval of the October 28 minutes. Move to approve. I have a motion by mister Brigham, a second by mister Fisher. All in favor? All opposed? Motion passes and approval of November 18, 2025 meeting minutes. Need to approve. I have a motion by mister Bregman. Second. Second by mister Fisher. All in favor? All opposed? I'm sure there's no discussion on that.

1:09:576

You hold off. I got my motion and second. I gotta get in here for Francis Street.

1:10:022

Okay. So

1:10:036

hang on. Unless you wanna jump to the next one. But do you

1:10:06 – 1:10:182

Ann? Yeah. Let's see here. No leads on the next one. So taking a short, time out for the hold on. I have to Part of my committee's eating biscuits.

1:10:2211

Do you have a caller?

1:10:235

I don't think so.

1:10:256

I got him

1:10:262

coming in. Okay. Where is he on the committee?

1:10:296

Yeah. Okay.

1:10:3111

That's in.

1:10:332

Alrighty. Welcome.

1:10:357

Bishop. Yeah. Where's Bishop?

1:10:370

you, Tim? Doing fine. Thank you.

1:10:41 – 1:10:532

Mister let's see here. Discussion of possible vote on Francis Street partial closing town of Batesburg, Leesville. And I think mister Brigham has some information about it also, but go ahead, mister Shepherd.

1:10:54 – 1:11:1418

Yeah. We received a request to close a portion of a dirt road in town of Batesburg. It's off of East Church Street, known as Francis Street. It's about 800 feet from the intersection where it intersects with East Shirt Street. That's Highway 23 near the Walmart in Batesburg, if you're not familiar with the area.

1:11:14 – 1:11:5118

I am. So we have a request to just close that portion and, you know, there is some development going on in that area and at some point in time, there will be another road that ties back into 23 as part of that development which will be a much better geometric alignment. So, you know, this portion of the road will not be needed at all. And, you know, of course, Public Works is glad to get rid of any dirt roads that we don't have to blade any more often than we have to. So But basically, that's We have reached out to, you know, all everyone including the town to get there.

1:11:51 – 1:12:0218

Okay on that, everyone and including, you know, emergency services, you know, GIS and all of our other agencies are are have no objections to the closure.

1:12:022

Very good. So we have a road closure recommendation and we have the citizens with no objection.

1:12:08 – 1:12:476

I went to the meeting, if you don't mind, mister chairman, to the meeting last year sometime, Batesburg Lethal Town Council, myself and Brent Hyatt and told them what was going on and and why and entertained a few questions and there was no objection or opposition from BNL Council. I needed to do that and wanted to do that because it's in their jurisdiction, the road is in the town even though it's a county road, so I need them to be okay with it. And they were. But I am gonna have to abstain from voting because my brother-in-law owns one side of that road. The builder owns the other side.

1:12:476

So being that I am related to someone that owns some land on that road closure, I'm gonna have to abstain. So with that said Wow. Call for the motion.

1:12:584

We approve it. I do have a question if we get a if we have a second.

1:13:025

Yes, sir.

1:13:044

We're gonna second the motion.

1:13:061

see. Yeah. Me

1:13:0714

and her.

1:13:072

Okay. Well, I thought you had a you had

1:13:099

I thought you were I was gonna ask it

1:13:114

after second. Like I was asking after

1:13:131

a motion. Motion.

1:13:142

Mister Coe, I'm in the second. Who seconded it? Mister mister Bishop now. Discussion. Yes.

1:13:194

I'm just reading in the in the staff's explanation of the request that Can you

1:13:239

hear a question?

1:13:234

A new road called Southern Fox Lane is part of the Creekside Ridge subdivision. But there's not a subdivision on this closed part of the road. Right?

1:13:336

On one side, they're building a 199 houses. Yes. In the town?

1:13:374

Yeah. Yes.

1:13:386

Behind Walmart. How they how are they getting access?

1:13:416

I guess This is it. This is that's why they're closing the road because it comes in

1:13:444

kinda at

1:13:456

an angle. Yeah. It's a dirt road right off of US 1 that takes you to North Lee Street.

1:13:506

And it's only, whatever it is, 800 feet that they're closing off, not the whole road. So they can get a entrance.

1:13:574

They're gonna build the entrance off of Church Street.

1:13:596

Oh, to cut Francis Street out of it and and enter on Church. Yes.

1:14:034

I was okay.

1:14:046

It's already in construction. Oh, it is? At home. It looks looks like it.

1:14:1010

Hundred 99

1:14:101

Home. Hundred 99.

1:14:116

Yep. Wonder why. Only one entry and exit. Wonder where they got that from.

1:14:164

But what I'm saying is the town's building up. Right? What? Town's building up. Yeah.

1:14:2013

Hundred And 99.

1:14:212

Alright. Batesville is very good. I'm happy for Batesburg.

1:14:262

We have a vote. We have a second. We have a discussion. All in favor? All opposed?

1:14:336

And I have to abstain.

1:14:34 – 1:14:552

And Larry abstain. Thank you. Thank you. Lee McIntyre is our director of solid waste. He's here to talk about the approval of electric waste recycling agreement with Dynamic Lifecycle Innovations. Welcome, sir.

1:14:55 – 1:15:215

Thank you, sir. Solid Waste Management staff requested an approval of an agreement between the county and Dynamic Lifecycle Innovations to recycle electronic waste. This will be our third year if approved to move forward with this agreement. Few years ago, there were some changes in the laws and things which changed the way we do things and and the agreement or the amount

1:15:211

of business that they do

1:15:22 – 1:15:415

with us falls well below the the need for a bid. But based on the history of electronics recycling and some things, legal issues, we wanted to bring it before counsel to get their approval on it. The estimated yearly cost of this would be about $17,000 a year, and this is just a one year agreement.

1:15:422

So, babe, you've had no problems with them in the past, and you're asking for a recommendation we use them again?

1:15:475

Yes, sir.

1:15:482

Correct. No issues. Y'all heard the information? One question. Yes, sir.

1:15:534

Alright. So when they take it, it's theirs. Right? Correct.

1:15:574

We're going back.

1:15:592

Yeah. I know

1:16:005

the story. Yes, sir. There there is there is in the agreement, there is some language that mister Anderson has added that makes it once it is placed on the trailer, it

1:16:0910

is their property.

1:16:102

Very good. Really?

1:16:124

There's some history to that There's

1:16:156

behind that.

1:16:164

Yes. It is. Expensive history.

1:16:186

Can I have a

1:16:192

motion Motion to approve? Motion by mister Cullum.

1:16:247

Second by mister Fisher.

1:16:25 – 1:16:402

Second by mister Fisher. You're there you go. A motion by mister Colm and second by mister Fisher. All in favor? All opposed? Any discussion? Lee, I have something for you for you, Lee. You got a pen? Yes.

1:16:4310

Now or later?

1:16:44 – 1:16:592

I know. Okay. Allendale Drive. The end of Allendale Drive, we had a walk the other day beside the Grey Academy at the end of that road, his tires and mattresses. Would you mind swinging by there and snatching them up for us?

1:16:595

Yes. We'll take care

1:17:001

of them.

1:17:002

Thank you, sir. Thank you. We are now adjourned. Alright.

1:17:054

Zee, I think we've all kinda entered back and forth. Everybody I'm a take

1:17:092

a break in the bathroom.

1:17:11 – 1:17:274

Alright. Anybody, do you want we're gonna proceed on then. Think we're just a little bit behind. Alright? That's it. We're gonna call to order today's committee of the whole meeting. I got three sets of minutes here. I'd ask for a a motion to approve the 10/14/2025 meeting minutes.

1:17:2711

It's approved.

1:17:28 – 1:17:404

Mister Carrey makes the motion to approve. Second to Conwell seconds. Is there any comments or questions about the meeting minutes? Hearing none, all in favor? All opposed? Looks like it passes. How about October 28?

1:17:414

Miss Carried makes motion to approve the 10/28/2025 meeting minutes. Second. Second by mister Conwell. Any comment or question on the minutes?

1:17:491

Hearing none, all in favor?

1:17:514

All opposed? Motion passes. Miss Carrig?

1:17:5511

Move to approve.

1:17:56 – 1:18:134

November 18, three twenty five meeting minutes. Miss Carrig has moved to approve. Is there a second? Second by mister Conwell. Any comment or question on the meeting minutes? Hearing none, all in favor? Opposed? Motion passes. Great. Alright. Mister Stack.

1:18:1319

Good afternoon.

1:18:134

Good afternoon. Happy New Year, sir.

1:18:15 – 1:18:5219

You too. Four contract extensions starting with food service program for the sheriff's department detention center. Procurement in Lexington County Sheriff's Department are requesting additional one year extension for the food service program at LCDC contract with Trinity Services Group. County council initially approved this contract on 02/14/2023 for a period of three years with the option to extend seven additional one year periods. This contract went into effect on 04/12/2023 and currently expires 04/11/2026.

1:18:52 – 1:19:0819

We are requesting that the first extension begin 04/12/2026 through 04/11/2027. The estimated annual value of this contract is 2,669,000 and no no issues. Alright.

1:19:084

Is there a motion to approve this contract extension for food service program for the detention center? I hear First. Miss Carey makes a motion to approve. Is there a

1:19:167

second? Second.

1:19:174

And miss Wassinger make a second. Alright. Any comment or question for mister Stack? Hearing none, all in favor? All opposed? Motion passes.

1:19:27 – 1:20:0419

Very good. Next, have the OnCall Information Technology Consulting and product project management for Lexington County Sheriff's Department. Procurement in the Lexington County Sheriff's Department are requesting an additional one year extension for on call information technology consulting and project management contract with Blue Summit Technology Partners. County council initially approved this contract on 03/26/2024 for a period of one year with the option to extend for additional one year periods. This contract went into effect on April 2024 and currently expires 03/31/2026.

1:20:04 – 1:20:1619

We are requesting the second extension begin 04/01/2026 through 03/31/2027. The estimated annual value of this contract is $138,000 and no issues.

1:20:164

Tell us the name of it one more time.

1:20:1819

I'm sorry?

1:20:194

Tell us the name of the company one more time.

1:20:2119

Blue Summit Technology Partners. K.

1:20:25 – 1:20:444

Any motions It's on the on call information with Technology Consulting. Miss Carey makes a motion to approve. Is there a second? Second. Second by the Bishop. Any comment or question for mister Stack? Hearing none. All in favor? All opposed? Motion passes. Great.

1:20:45 – 1:21:2719

Next, we have the employee health and benefit plan. Procurement and human resources are requesting additional one year extension for the employee health and benefit contract with Planned Administrators Incorporated. County Council initially approved this contract on 05/24/2011 for a period of three years with the option to extend annually one year periods. This contract went into effect on 01/01/2012 and currently expires 12/31/2025. We are requesting that the twelfth extension begin in 01/01/2026 through 12/31/2026. The estimated annual value of this contract is $773,120 and no issues.

1:21:2711

Move to approve.

1:21:29 – 1:21:444

It's carried by the motion to approve. The second is mister Alright. Comment or question for mister Stack about the, plan administrators contract. All in favor? All opposed? Motion passes.

1:21:44 – 1:22:2819

Very good. Lastly, we have the On-site Medical Clinic. Procurement and Human Resources are requesting an additional one year extension for the On-site Medical Clinic contract with Marathon Health. County council initially approved this contract on 09/20/2013 for a period of three years with the option to extend annually for additional one year periods. This contract went into effect on 02/19/2014 and currently expires 02/18/2026. We are requesting that the tenth extension begin 02/19/2026 through 02/18/2027. The estimated annual value of this contract is $1,781,900 and no issues.

1:22:294

Alright. We have a

1:22:3011

Move to approve.

1:22:33 – 1:22:484

Miscarried to approve the contract extension for On-site Medical Clinic. Is there a sec? Mister Hudson makes a second. Any comment question, mister Stack? The comment what I would have said is that it's one of the greatest things that I think we've done for the employees of this county.

1:22:504

When we put that in place in a tremendous cost savings to the taxpayer for for the money that we save in that clinic.

1:22:5711

And a tremendous benefit to the employees.

1:22:594

It is it is absolutely that. Alright. Any other thing further? All in favor? All opposed? Motion passes.

1:23:0613

Very good. Thank you.

1:23:074

Mister Stack, thank you,

1:23:086

sir. Yep.

1:23:094

Alright. Next we have before us, our county administrator, mister Sturkey, on a letter of support and a possible vote on a FEMA grant application.

1:23:19 – 1:23:378

Yes. The city of Casey, we work with them. The city of Casey is applying for a federal emergency management agency or FEMA. It's a hazard mitigation grant program. This program will be used to complete the final divisions of the multiphase Casey Avenue's drainage project.

1:23:37 – 1:24:188

As you know, they've they've been working on this project and and and right looking to wrap this up. This is the city of Casey is looking for us to provide a a letter of support saying that we would join with them and other agencies, including state agencies that they're getting partnerships with for when this comes to fruition, if it comes to fruition. This is a seventy five, twenty five grant and upwards up to but they do not know how much the grant will become available for, particularly for as it as it comes available when they do the application. So they've

1:24:18 – 1:24:518

letter saying that they would like to apply for it. And then within their letter, it was 30,000,000 that was requested. It would be a 22,000,000 in federal funds, 7.5 potentially in local government would be shared between KC. If council decides to go forward with it, the county DOT, other state projects, they're reaching out for other funds. Again, until they know, we don't know the amount. It'll be at least a year out, but they need him to go ahead and submit the documentation. That's why they're looking for a letter of support.

1:24:514

Isn't this one time money, think, understand?

1:24:538

That is correct. One time funds.

1:24:554

From FEMA and and when the filing period closes, it closes and the funds are then That is correct.

1:25:018

Right? That's done away with this. It's

1:25:024

just one

1:25:038

time that they're using to wrap up that project.

1:25:062

I'll make a motion to approve.

1:25:08 – 1:25:364

Yep. Yeah. We have a motion by mister Hudson to approve to, send a letter of support to the city of Casey on the FEMA grant application. Is there a second? Mister Cockrell has made a second. Does anybody have any comment or question, what's asked of us? Alright. Hearing none. All in favor? All opposed? Motion passes. Okay. Next, mister Derrick. We got a Serenity Lake subdivision concurrency review.

1:25:39 – 1:26:2110

Thank you, members of council. This project was submitted before council made a change to not send the questionnaires to the public school districts in Lexington County. Since it was submitted prior to that change, staff did proceed with taking this to Planning Commission. Again, just the purpose of this agenda item is for us to provide the Planning Commission's recommendation to counsel in relation to your currency questionnaire submitted by Lexington County School District one. Just as a reminder, school districts were part of this process, that they cannot provide a yes or no answer in terms of adequate public facilities, so administration and community development staff work with all five public school districts to develop a questionnaire to provide information for consideration of new developments.

1:26:2210

Per council's previously adopted policy, the planning commission is to review and make a recommendation to council who in turn makes the final decision based upon the planning commission's response and all

1:26:311

available

1:26:31 – 1:27:1110

information. A copy of the completed questionnaire and project sketch plan are included within council's packet. Please note this process has been removed from currency as we just previously mentioned. The concurrence review sketch plan is submitted and basic compliance for zoning and open spaces confirmed prior to the concurrence review. Density minimum lot size setbacks, open space, and road and transitional buffers are specifically reviewed by staff. Please note layout is subject to change once full engineering and site design is completed. Just a little background on this project. Again, the name is Syringy Lake. The general location is West Of Southlake Drive, North Of Briarpatch Road, and South Of Buck Quarley Road. This is within the Red Bank community.

1:27:12 – 1:27:3310

Tax map numbers are 6,500 o four zero zero nine and o four two. This is in County Council District five represented by Councilman Clifford Fisher. This is a single family development on 173.79 acres. Proposed number of dwelling units is four zero two. The density is two point two point three one three dwelling units per acre.

1:27:33 – 1:28:0410

Just for information purposes, if you were to remove the potential infrastructure and open space, you would look at approximately 3.4 dwelling units per acre. Smallest lot size is 9,002.5 square feet. Currently 9,000 square feet is the minimum allowed and the percent open space as shown is 23.6% which is 41.1 acres. For the developer, phase one will include a lift station and historically that takes about twelve months. Subsequent phases generally take additional ten months.

1:28:04 – 1:28:2410

The draft phasing plan illustrates seven phases so an estimated total build out will be approximately six years following permit approvals and onset of site construction. The production build out for each single family home is approximately a hundred and twenty to a hundred and fifty days. Planning commission recommended on November 20 with a vote of seven to one to recommend approval to have this project move forward with permitting.

1:28:2711

What schools?

1:28:2810

It says we'll attend Red Bank Elementary, Carolina Springs Middle School, and White Mill High School.

1:28:336

The other one voted no. Concerns with

1:28:3710

the the aggregate number of students and their impacts on the schools.

1:28:4211

This is school district.

1:28:4310

School district one. Yes, ma'am. Yeah.

1:28:446

Question here doesn't reflect an issue.

1:28:494

That's I saw.

1:28:566

I still have 4.595 per acre, which I have trouble with. It's over four per acre, and I understand the calculation of how you get that.

1:29:064

That's without the open space.

1:29:076

I get it, but that's more than four per acre.

1:29:1110

If you take the open space and infrastructure is 3.408.

1:29:146

I get that. But

1:29:164

And that's how we measure all of them.

1:29:186

Calculate. Did you do the whole track or just the area where you're building houses? The gross acres. Different ways to look at it.

1:29:27 – 1:29:484

Alright. So we've got a submitted before us. We've got a recommendation from the planning commission and we've got a one of the last questionnaires which was submitted by school district one. Are there any motions on the Serenity Lakes subdivision? We have any motions to approve?

1:29:482

Probably real quick. I might have missed it. Did you say the ambulance, fire, concurrency, everything checked?

1:29:5210

All all county all county agencies have approved this and move forward. They met all

1:29:566

their major Seven one staff recommendation.

1:29:5810

Seven to one planning commission recommendation. Yes, sir.

1:30:051

Make a motion to approve it.

1:30:084

A motion for mister Fisher to approve the, submittal on Serenity Lakes. Is there a second?

1:30:151

Second. Okay.

1:30:16 – 1:30:324

Mister Bishop seconds the motion. Any further comment or question on the submittal before us? Hearing none, all in favor? All opposed. Let's see if we got two. Must be six. Yep.

1:30:3210

And just just for clarification again, this is not an approval of the project. This is for the project to begin the permitting process to move forward. Correct.

1:30:434

Alright. Let's see. Moving along. There, we got a discussion here on some county design incentives for a Central Overlay District.

1:30:55 – 1:31:4810

I've got with me this afternoon, mister Jason Wilkie. Just as a reminder to counsel, we started a process or discussion regarding preferred design incentives several months ago look at avenues to potentially create better products, more open space, more pleasing communities within Lexington County. Myself, Administrator Sturkey, mister Wilkey, and some other local developing developers met with some members of council to start this process. Mister Wilke spoke to council several, weeks ago. We were directed by council to take mister Wilke's comments that he presented to council, put them in a draft text form, so that's what we have for you today, is their proposed changes to both the zoning ordinance, particularly the Central Overlay District is what council direct the staff to put these changes within within as well as proposed changes to the landscape and open space ordinance.

1:31:49 – 1:32:4210

Mister Wilkie provided this information to counsel. What I'm a simply do is go through the changes, read those into record, I'll let mister Wilkie go through and and kind of follow-up and give a synopsis on kind of where this ties in and where it relates to the information he presented several meetings ago. And just some highlights before we go through some of the changes and again include the draft overlay, central overlay district to include these preferred design standards with incentives and densities, updates to our landscape and open space orders on trophy tree mitigation and off-site open space. Landscape and open space include provisions to address trees and utilities countywide, define cluster developments in both the zoning and landscape and open space ordinance, specific design standards for road improvements, curvatures, boulevards, etcetera. Again, sidewalks are not specifically addressed within draft text.

1:32:42 – 1:33:2710

Again, we'll need to further review that especially within our ability to accept and maintain roads and there was a policy for 10 lots or less developments to be implemented for more of an expedited review process that has already taken place. So the first draft text, all new draft text is highlighted in red. We took the existing draft central overlay and used the red text to show the changes. The first purpose portion is within the purpose. We add the statement, the intent of this article is to also further encourage flexible design standards by promoting incentives when the use of certain architectural elements, open space standards, and road designs are incorporated in development plans further aligning aesthetic designs within the town of standards.

1:33:28 – 1:34:1010

Again, Jason, I'll just reference this as this just leads into what the intent of these proposed changes are. Under definitions, again, we wanted to include a definition for cluster developments. The same definition has also been included within the draft text for the landscape and open space ordinance. Again, to read in the record cluster developments are residential subdivision development planning practices that groups homes more closely together on portions of the site while preserving larger portions of remaining land as open space such as recreation, conservation, forest sensitive areas, or agriculture. This approach focuses on expansive perimeter open space protections to allow for smaller individual lots with potentially higher residential density in certain aspects.

1:34:1010

This planning practice helps reduce infrastructure costs, preserves natural features and can increase the greater sense of community. Jason, you want to elaborate on anything with that?

1:34:2014

I don't know. There's a lot lot else to say with it. Do y'all have any questions about it?

1:34:254

Is that consistent with what we already have in the comprehensive plan from a cluster development perspective?

1:34:3010

Comprehensive plan does recognize open space preservation and conservation type open space which is what in essence a cluster development is.

1:34:404

So I guess we're not veering away from what we have as a countywide comp plan. Okay?

1:34:4510

That's your state.

1:34:464

We're not getting outside of those bounds. No.

1:34:49 – 1:35:167

I have I have a question about cluster developments. I know Newbury County has done away with cluster developments altogether. I know we've talked about it, and I've even shared stuff with you that I found from, like, the sixties back in Chicago. But those those cluster developments that I'd even set you as example, there might only be, like, six to 10 homes in a cluster on a curved road. Or over here, there might be six to 10 homes clustered in the area.

1:35:17 – 1:35:397

When when there's other count counties in the state that are starting to be like, no. We're done. No more cluster homes because it's it's creating issues for whatever reason. With this definition, have you guys considered any type of a minimum, maximum number of homes in a cluster that could help with design elements of a neighborhood subdivision?

1:35:40 – 1:36:0314

We have not discussed minimum and maximums there. Haven't been able to figure out how to make, clustering work with the existing, constraints through there now. Definitely believe clustering has its place and it's a good option, but we have not discussed minimums and maximums.

1:36:03 – 1:36:287

As I'd hate to cluster a 100 homes versus 10, you know, because that defeats the purpose of a cluster. The larger you get, the or it doesn't work. Right? It just doesn't doesn't it's not a cluster anymore. You know? So there might be, might be consideration to define a max or a minimum on what that cluster is and what it looks like. Sure. Potentially.

1:36:2810

Maybe an opportunity to use some graphics on that also. Right.

1:36:31 – 1:36:4414

I think the big thing there and and again, depending on size and size of track would be minimum lot size. That minimum lot size tends to impact the ability to cluster.

1:36:444

Right. So

1:36:4611

So if I may, Jason

1:36:49 – 1:37:1811

I talked yesterday for some period of time and we we've talked about the cluster design and I I certainly understand it pretty well. I like it for certain places. I think there is a desire and probably maybe even a need for something like this. I think I think it would go over well in certain places. For me, like I said yesterday, I don't think that the Central Overlay District is necessary, the place to be able to accommodate.

1:37:18 – 1:38:0311

And I certainly don't think it should be just our standard incentivized development across the county. I do think there are places for it. I think it's kind of a one off. I think there's an opportunity for us to make another sort of centralized development system where Jason or those who would like a cluster development can come before council, and then go, before the design review board and anyone else, and then come back for council to make a decision on those those specific, very, very well designed neighborhoods. But for the Central a for the Central Overlay District, I just don't think this can be our common thread all the time.

1:38:03 – 1:38:2211

So I would like to see us leave what we have in place right now as we have some more conversations, some more discussions, and then figure out exactly what the perfect place is for a cluster development in Lexington County.

1:38:224

Do we actually have a example of maybe cluster development that we can

1:38:2710

I did not put

1:38:284

one in the I just think cluster?

1:38:307

Yeah. There's a place in Texas.

1:38:329

There's one in Texas that the whole town there's a place in Texas. I can't think

1:38:354

of the name. Texas?

1:38:36 – 1:38:489

Yeah. They they got a beautiful design of how cluster is supposed to work and not be abused by, you know, developers coming in, but they've got beautiful cluster neighborhoods all in that town.

1:38:49 – 1:39:137

So Yeah. Those are whole neighborhoods. Yeah. Not just a group of homes in a neighborhood that are clustered together. So there's a there's a difference between a clustered neighborhood built by another neighborhood built by another neighborhood versus five to 10 homes in this one little cluster down a cul de sac or in a little area of a neighborhood, then you go down the street and you come there's another little cluster of neighbors. God forbid you get in a fight with your neighbor when you're clustered there.

1:39:13 – 1:39:3011

I'm not opposed to I'm not opposed to what you're you put a lot of effort into and a lots of discussion. I'm not completely opposed to this at all. I think there's places for them. I'm just I feel like I I would I feel like we need some more time.

1:39:30 – 1:40:029

This whole project, the whole central overlay in the agreement between the town and the county, originally, the purpose was for us to get together with the town and the county so we don't have developers jumping into the town to annex, to try to get better zoning. And I have worked with the town of Lexington administration tremendously over the last year, and this has gotten so far away from what we initially started with. These incentives are great. Brick homes, we want better neighborhoods. When we build neighborhoods, we don't want all vinyl sided.

1:40:02 – 1:40:339

We want brick homes. We want nice neighborhoods, curvy roads, long entrances. I think, we're all in agreement that we want better quality neighborhoods. And at this time, I would like to move to end the central overlay, and we're gonna start over. I've already talked to the Lexington Town Administration, and we're gonna start from scratch with the new planning chair, whoever that is this year, and work together to get back to where we originally wanted to be with the road traffic and all the good points of this. We've gotten away from all the good points.

1:40:3411

Why would why would we do away with the protections that we have when we can just leave it status

1:40:389

There's an impending ordinance that's been put on that. This is almost been lingering for close to a year

1:40:4411

now. And Until we have something to replace it.

1:40:47 – 1:41:179

Oh, that's all we've got is these impending ordinance in this. We have nothing with the agreement with the town of Lexington and we've gotten away from the intended purpose of this whole agreement was to work with the town administration and match up our zoning so we don't have people jumping forth. And I would like to see us just go ahead and end this, start scratch from scratch with all the roads and agreements. And I wanna get rid of the impending ordinance because we're not getting anywhere with what we intended to start with.

1:41:1711

It's not doing impending ordinance.

1:41:199

An impending doctrine ordinance. Let me ask you this then,

1:41:224

mister Taco. So with that being said, do do we still wanna kinda go through and understand what the incentive?

1:41:289

I want the incentives are great to listen to, and I do want to listen to that. And we wanna work on because this could improve our neighborhoods. We're not gonna stop development.

1:41:37 – 1:41:494

So I guess what maybe I don't wanna put words in your mouth. I'm hearing that possibly what we have in a way of in an in an incentive package that could really be countywide, not just overlay specific.

1:41:499

I would like to look at this in specific spots of the county where it would fit.

1:41:534

Have any feelings about that one way or another? I mean, right now? I guess what I'm saying is that they put a lot of work and time in this. I think you've had countless calls

1:42:0411

Numerous meetings and home calls with it.

1:42:05 – 1:42:184

This. If if we wanna go that direction, I think, you know, appropriate time we can bring that up maybe for a vote if you want to. But I don't know if this is gonna have a impact on that.

1:42:189

Yeah. This will not have the impact on central overlay because they were like, we we weren't even part of the discussion on this and

1:42:264

On the design standards? Yes. I see.

1:42:289

Now the design standards, yes, I would love to look at this in specific as part of parts of the county. Yeah. Not county wide, not just open, you know

1:42:364

We go ahead and go through all of what they've got presented today and then if we wanna circle back where you are?

1:42:419

We can do that. We

1:42:46 – 1:43:008

can certainly move it to to another one if you wanna if you wanna do that. We we got about twenty five minutes left. We do have an executive session item we need to we're gonna need about thirty minutes probably. If you want, I can move fairly

1:43:0010

quickly through this, and Jason wants to piggyback when

1:43:039

I go through it. I did

1:43:05 – 1:43:2310

say He's just councilman Woman Wessinger mentioned cluster developments. I don't think cluster developments are per se listed as a design standard within these this preferred incentives, but using a higher density, more open space is traditionally called cluster, so

1:43:24 – 1:43:4810

that's why we call that the definition for cluster. And two, when council began this process of preferred design incentives, we were directed to go ahead and just amend the central overlay initially with this to get the process started. Again, this is just for discussion purposes, what direction this goes, we can we'll learn more as council directs us to move forward. I'm a go through it fairly quickly, Jason. If you wanna wanna stop me as we go through, just just jump in.

1:43:49 – 1:44:1810

Under calculation of maximum density, a notation was placed within that for the purposes of this article and to further promote connectivity, the least restrictive street classification may be used in calculating the allowed maximum density. Example, for closed residential subdivision access is both an arterial street, is generally your high density roads, and a local street, you may utilize the arterial street density allowances, again, to promote connectivity, secondary entrances, etc. Go ahead, go ahead, Justin. So there

1:44:18 – 1:44:4914

are some scenarios Mr. Brigham brought up earlier, but some scenarios where the secondary street classification is not high enough to get any type of density. And so it's coming down to entrances are being placed where they're not the ideal scenario for the subdivision. And if we change this, it can it can be done to where the entrances are located where they will more benefit the people that live in the neighborhood.

1:44:52 – 1:45:2010

Moving forward under maximum permitted residential density, there is a typo in this. I do apologize. Section twenty two thirty is where the density allowances are located within the ordinance. We simply reference that section except for townhomes, which I believe the the vote in the conversation was to maximize that at six dwelling units per exact acre. In essence, it will basically mimic what I have highlighted here for the maximum densities prior to any incentives, so they are very restrictive.

1:45:22 – 1:45:4310

This was part of some of the original central overlay text. Again, I apologize, I forgot to omit that and clean that up. Going to your residential design incentives, these are the specific design incentives that Mr. Wilkie provided to counsel, again putting these in ordinance form. 162.3 would define these design incentives.

1:45:44 – 1:46:3310

Certain design standards for residential developments have been identified to promote harmonious communities which will further serve the greater good of the overall community. Various design incentives are included to promote various standards or identify within a section which allow flexibility for residential subdivisions if utilized as prescribed. There are five categories of the preferred design elements and they're identified in this section and again, if you use certain number, you get more allowances for density. So developers choosing to implement two of the design standards in at least two categories can reduce the minimum lot size. Developers choosing to implement two design standards in at least two categories and include exterior structural finishes using the brick stone, fiber cement, stucco or other materials may reduce the minimum lot size requirement and the side setbacks to five feet.

1:46:34 – 1:47:2410

Developments choosing to implement to the standards using exterior finishes in on street parking may reduce the minimum lot size requirements, side setbacks and front setbacks at a developer's discretion upon based on the overall design plan. Again, rear loading, parking, parallel parking elements utilized with that. Developments choosing to implement five of these preferred design elements in a minimum of three categories are allowed an additional one dwelling unit per acre for residential density as well as the allowances from the previous items noted in A, B and C. And if they will implement six design standards in four categories, then they're allowed two additional dwelling units per acre for residential density as well as allowances from the previous noted items a, b, and c. The different design elements, they are the certain categories.

1:47:25 – 1:47:5310

One is category one, environmental and open space. Design incentives would include protect existing road corridor buffers with a minimum width of 100 feet. The site must be currently forested or wooded to qualify for this. Again, along existing corridors, more of a wooded buffer area, which this would be double what the requirement is currently for open space. Protect existing forested buffers between internal rear lots, rear lot lines of a minimum of 25 feet in width.

1:47:53 – 1:48:2810

I think this goes back to a project that mister Wilkie is looking to do for Pleasant View where you have your roads, your homes and the homes aren't backed up to each other. There's open space and natural wooded buffers between those rows of homes along those corridors internal to that development. Include walking trails throughout the proposed open space and these should be outside the road corridor buffers and to provide 50% more than the minimum required open space to include this as your cluster developments using your higher density with your your more open space, Councilwoman Westsinger. Anything you want add on environmental, Jason, before I jump to the next one?

1:48:28 – 1:49:1014

So this this all goes back to what I met with miss miss Carrie, miss Wesinger, and mister Hudson, about trying to make development in Lexington better. And and so everything that you see here was about making it better and and trying to make it to where the homes were nicer, the subdivisions were nicer. It felt more like a neighborhood feel. It was just about making development better. And so that that's what we have tried to promote here is is that, and obviously, there are incentives to get there because it it takes something to get something.

1:49:1014

But but, I believe that it it definitely makes development in the county better.

1:49:16 – 1:49:4811

So you're right. We've we've had a number of conversations about that. My problem has always been my problems have always been the setbacks, you know, five foot setbacks or less. I've always had concerns. I know we've had the conversation about using flame retardant materials to protect against fires that may jump from rafter to rafter to rafter, but I still feel like we're in a place where I do believe there's a place for this development.

1:49:48 – 1:50:0311

Maybe there's a place for several of these developments. I don't believe that it can be part of our regular design standard for there to be 20 of them in Lexington County. I just don't think that's what the residents of Lexington County want. Trust me. I don't think they want the other stuff that's coming either.

1:50:03 – 1:50:4211

I mean, it's not a if or or. It's they don't want that either, but I don't think they want homes just sitting on top of each other. A one off or a two off, a a Saluda River Club is a one off or a two off, and and those types of development. And, Jason, I respect you a great deal, and I I think you do beautiful work, and I think there's lots of places for it. I just don't know that it's should be part of I think it needs to have its own developmental ordinance for certain places in the county and not just an all encompassing free for all in Lansing County for this to be part of our standards. Right.

1:50:427

I agree. How

1:50:45 – 1:50:596

you put six houses per acre? And especially if you're adding features to the house and you got a 3,000 square foot of house or whatever. It you can't get six per acre. So why why are you giving incentives for something that can't happen?

1:50:5914

I I don't think you can get there. I don't think you can get We can

1:51:016

get two extra. We've been

1:51:024

told we could get 12.

1:51:0314

But but not every It's regular. We get 12. But keep in mind, not every Oh. Not every site starts at four. Some sites start at two.

1:51:1111

Those are duplexes.

1:51:136

Good good thing. Start at two and buy back two. You know, I don't see how you can do more than four per acre. They're just too close to each other. That that's not feasible.

1:51:2214

I agree with you. But I I think some of that point is some subdivisions start at two. So to be able to go up

1:51:31 – 1:51:446

from there here that the starting point was two. It just said you get the two more additional. Where is your starting point? So you're saying two, basically, and then you can add two more by doing better design?

1:51:444

He's saying road kinda class That's starts you at two. And then you can if you do these other features of which are incentives, he gets two more.

1:51:526

Right. But if it's an arterial road, you already get four. Right. So what I you got

1:51:57 – 1:52:144

And I've been saying for over a year, I don't think you when you apply the setback standards regardless 10 or five that you can put a product out there that's gonna be greater than five probably. Maybe five, that'd be tops. Certainly not six and not beyond. I just don't think it's marketable.

1:52:14 – 1:52:256

Like you can do five, but anyway. Maybe. Good thing. You're talking about real close. Anyway, I just was concerned about past four parades on any road for that. Does

1:52:2514

it make sense on the ones that started too? I mean

1:52:2814

To be able to get a zoning bonus to that. You get a brick home instead of a home. We've talked about this.

1:52:356

That's I

1:52:379

think that's the key is having better quality built homes.

1:52:394

That's huge.

1:52:4014

And the neighborhoods. I mean, don't miss Kirby Road. There's there's some there's some really good stuff in this from just a neighborhood design that I think will make a big difference.

1:52:504

I never thought I would see a developer come forth and say they're willing to put a 25 foot buffer in between homes internally.

1:53:006

For your lots?

1:53:004

Yeah. And what I'm saying is we that's an expectation when you have lots on the perimeter. Yeah. For one more week. But to go internally?

1:53:072

Introduce. Introduce, Charlie.

1:53:10 – 1:53:277

Robbie, on this proposal in section one six two dot one two. Can you clarify to me what all these strike throughs mean and what areas that applies to?

1:53:28 – 1:54:0110

2230 revised the the density requirements for the overall ordinance itself to be more restrictive. When we started the process with the central overlay, we were looking at potentially some higher densities especially with attached units. So this was some of the original text. I failed to take out some of the strike throughs. So 2230 would reference your more restrictive densities for arterial, three collector, two local. Basically basically, the first the first set of strike throughs is what it currently references as the allowed density.

1:54:017

So that should not be struck in?

1:54:0410

It can be struck because it's already in section twenty two thirty which is referenced.

1:54:09 – 1:54:2711

Mister chair, if I could. I mean, the time is getting short and I really think that it's a bigger issue that we need a little bit more discussion on if we could move it down to the next meeting where we have some more opportunity to continue this discussion. I think it would be in everybody's best interest if we had a little more time.

1:54:274

We just wanted to get I know there's been a lot of interest in the public about this, and I wanted to try to get as much out of it.

1:54:3311

I know our time is kinda getting short now.

1:54:354

Yeah. Yep. Well, we got about yeah. We can move we can bring this back again.

1:54:4111

In two weeks.

1:54:44 – 1:55:042

I think the important thing about all this for everybody to realize is this is not about trying to create more houses. This is about trying to give builders an incentive to be creative, create a better product, a more longer lasting product. And for them to spend that extra money, we have to give something back. And the only way we do that is to give it the

1:55:049

ability to make some more money. Just to keep them down,

1:55:071

do they?

1:55:07 – 1:55:182

Not the goal is not to build more houses. It's to stop the checkerboarded vinyl siding. 100 houses in a row to make roads. More straight roads. I would love to see no more straight roads. That's the goal.

1:55:1911

I think everybody wants some creativity for sure.

1:55:212

More regulations just really ruins that. You said yourself, stormwater coming in is what ruined subdivisions

1:55:291

that used to

1:55:292

have trees because they had to meet all the stormwater compliance clear cut.

1:55:332

like We just

1:55:341

stayed out of rules ever came about. The rules have strengthened this subdivisions up.

1:55:411

It made them very rich.

1:55:429

Gave us the grids and

1:55:4311

Yep. If the first person had never clear cut and graded, we wouldn't be here today.

1:55:481

Well, the rules caused that problem.

1:55:5011

It did not. And if they did, that was that was twenty years ago. None of us were thinking about it.

1:55:564

Alright. We

1:55:5711

got left. This

1:56:004

is we're gonna get staff to bring the remaining of what we've got here back before us again.

1:56:0610

So we will start our next meeting basically going back into one sixty three ten design element jump into the different categories. Yeah. Kinda pick up where we left off.

1:56:1411

Alright. Thank you.

1:56:154

Mister Cockle, you brought up the fact something about the overlay.

1:56:1811

Thank you.

1:56:194

Do we wanna do anything with the overlay today, or is that your desire?

1:56:26 – 1:57:019

I mean, I think this totally gets us away from where we started over a year ago, and it's disappointing we could not accomplish what we try set out to accomplish, and that was to meet our zoning together and work on the traffic plan with the town. And, I think at this point, you know, starting over would give us incentive to work harder on getting something done and bring this back to life. I mean, I I personally would like to just get rid of the the impending ordinance and start over.

1:57:024

Is that a motion

1:57:036

that you

1:57:049

That's that's a motion I would make.

1:57:054

Do you wanna vote to discontinue ordinance twenty five zero six?

1:57:112

And it Some

1:57:146

of the same stuff. We

1:57:169

can put it back in, but we're gonna it's gonna give us incentive to get back on it and start over because we need to get back on this and work together with the town.

1:57:242

What's that gonna free up, though, by doing that?

1:57:299

Got the traffic study plan. I don't even remember what else was in the

1:57:347

I just don't I don't think we should even worry we're doing that.

1:57:3711

I think it's irresponsible to do that till we get some

1:57:40 – 1:57:539

It's irresponsible that we got this far and didn't get it passed because the only thing we've got is the ordinance over here sitting pending, and we have no agreement with the town and the county what we started with, which was the whole purpose of this was the town and county.

1:57:537

Town was fine with us doing the pending ordinance so nothing gets slammed into them until we get all the things worked out.

1:57:599

They're fine with killing it and starting over.

1:58:0310

We need to make sure if that's if there's gonna be a motion, we had the correct ordinance numbers. Twenty five zero six, I believe, was already passed in a different Twenty

1:58:119

five eleven and twelve, wasn't it? Is it

1:58:1310

eleven and twelve or ten 11? Eleven 12.

1:58:159

Eleven and twelve.

1:58:1711

when we still know we have other discussions to have. I just don't understand why we're rushing this through today.

1:58:237

It doesn't need to be

1:58:249

rush through today, but we've worked on it for a year and have gotten absolutely nowhere on it. I mean

1:58:307

up next week and or two weeks from now, let's start getting the town of Lexington into some meetings.

1:58:359

Meetings. This thing

1:58:3711

Several meetings. Joint meetings to

1:58:387

work together on this. I

1:58:4011

I understand.

1:58:4111

it too for a year before he got on it,

1:58:432

so I'm clear.

1:58:444

I was in it three months, and then they've been they've been meeting normal. I mean, a normal

1:58:489

I I actually started with them before I was sworn in.

1:58:5111

I understand. And we've and Daryl and I worked with him a year before that.

1:58:549

we brought good ideas to the table, and we couldn't did not get them passed.

1:58:5810

We were closed.

1:58:599

So I wanna kill this, start over, and let's get something passed.

1:59:037

I don't think there's a reason to kill it. I just think we need to just get some meetings scheduled.

1:59:074

What what is it gonna what is gonna hurt to discontinue it? That's what I don't wanna what what's the

1:59:129

We're not gonna lose anything. We can put whatever we want back into the new program. But

1:59:161

what think

1:59:174

is if we discontinue, we take the board and wipe it clean. What what does that do to us now?

1:59:217

Carol, you wanna talk about any of that that you might know

1:59:241

that's coming? I just wanna make sure the

1:59:256

spot. Yeah.

1:59:269

I mean, it makes me sick that we couldn't get this done

1:59:3013

As well.

1:59:3011

Why don't we commit Yeah.

1:59:327

So why don't we commit right now to getting the town of Lexington in, and let's meet with them in the next two to three weeks and get some work done on it. Alright.

1:59:419

We had a motion and a second.

1:59:434

We had a second? Yes. Yeah. Oh, I'm sorry. Mister Fisher has seconded the motions. Alright. So we I

1:59:479

do to get back on this and get it done and get it fixed

1:59:498

because we need to

1:59:514

One second. Before we actually do this, I've our staff needs to

1:59:54 – 2:00:2210

weigh in. There are two ordinances. There's one pending ordinance which is twenty five eleven which is amendments to the zoning ordinance for the Central Overlay District. This has a pending ordinance doctrine and had first reading on 06/24/2025. There is a second ordinance twenty five twelve, which are amendments to the landscape and open space ordinance adding the Central Overlay District with certain open space regulations without a pending ordinance with first reading 06/24/2025.

2:00:247

You really can't do The one that has Right now.

2:00:27 – 2:00:418

And I mean, that's just to be clear though, the the removal and and ordinance twenty five eleven twelve is not on the agenda today. So therefore, if bank, Jeff, we are unable to take a vote on that today. No.

2:00:4112

Not on the agenda.

2:00:427

Okay. Okay. So we can't do that

2:00:448

right now.

2:00:454

In the discussion of the of the overlay District within itself. No? I'm just trying to be real clear.

2:00:50 – 2:01:078

Right. Ordinance twenty five eleven and twelve, which he is wanting to vote to is not on the agenda. That's the issue. If we're moving forward today, we can certainly put it on the next agenda for discussion. But for today, 11:12 has got to be pushed since not on the agenda.

2:01:071

Write that down, mister Hudson.

2:01:08 – 2:01:264

Well, then we we've kinda answered then we we've let it staff and our and our attorney kinda pull us back to the to the middle. So alright. I think what we're gonna have to do is is put this on the next agenda in January. If we're all in agreement to that. Yeah.

2:01:269

I'll come up with a plan between now and then.

2:01:304

Alright. Okay. Alright. Mister

2:01:33 – 2:01:448

chairman, I recommend we move to accommodations tax also and move to executive session. We have the the accommodations tax. There is enough another meeting in between that we can take it up then. There there is no impact to the accommodations tax decision.

2:01:444

Yeah. We've got a little time on that. Okay. Great. Alright. So we need to go in executive session?

2:01:492

That's correct.

2:01:50 – 2:02:034

Right. Alright. So I would entertain a motion to go in executive session for a legal briefing on a matter protected by the attorney account client privilege. This is code section 30 dash four dash 70 a two. Alright.

2:02:0311

Yep. Do need to go into executive session?

2:02:06 – 2:03:144

Makes the motion to go into executive session, and miss Westinger seconds. Returning back from our executive session, legal briefing discussions, there are no be no votes taken today because of our discussions. However, this matter has been agreed to be brought back up on the next agenda of the twenty seventh. Right? Yeah.

2:03:14 – 2:03:264

We've agreed that, again, this matter will be brought back up on our agenda and the committee to hold for January 27. Alright. No other discussion or comments. We are adjourned for this afternoon.

2:03:2611

Thank you.

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.