Updates from Locust Grove City Council

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  Locust Grove is making plans to get some new firepower.

  Well, not exactly new. The City Council voted at its Sept. 2 regular meeting to approve an official request for the donation from the Army Donations program of a 1944 M1A1 cannon for the City Hall grounds.

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  Should the transaction be completed as planned, the World War II-era antiaircraft gun would be placed in the vicinity of the city’s planned veterans memorial site, which is part of the municipal complex master plan. Moving expenses for the piece are expected to be about $5,000 with additional costs for sandblasting and painting to keep it in good shape, according to a city staff report.

  In other business, the council passed a resolution approving a landscape and tree replacement plan for the Gardner Farms industrial project. The developer is preserving approximately 6,100 tree units at the site, the majority of which are on the west side of the northern tract, according to city officials. The entire property is west of Hwy. 42, north of Market Place Blvd. and south of Bethlehem Road.

  The property was rezoned in May of 2018 and the first rendering of the landscape plan approved a few months later. The Gardner tract has been graded since then and the westernmost building that fronts I-75 is nearing completion, according to a city staff report.

  The rest of the property is being redesigned to accommodate a smaller building that fronts Hwy. 42 and add more parking by acquiring 96 acres of adjacent property to the north that is already zoned for industrial purposes. The brings the gross acreage to 217.4 while reducing the total building square footage from 2,018,000 to 1,670,040. The new plan will provide about 882 auto parking spaces and 2,050 truck parking spaces.

  The Atlanta Regional Commission reviewed the changes and issued May 2019 a notice in May of this year with several conditions, mostly about turn lanes and other improvements at various intersections. There were also several specific guidelines for buffering along certain road corridors.

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  Another amendment to the city’s zoning map approved by the council addresses a site at 3330 Hwy. 42 which is familiar to virtually everyone who lives or works in the area. It is the site of the city’s water tower, and it has been rezoned from RA (residential-agricultural_ to TCU (transportation, communications, and utilities).

  The use of the property is not changing, but its previous RA zoning was incompatible with the city’s ordinances because the entire tract is 0.8 acres and at least one full acre is required for RA zoning, making it technically a “legal non-conforming lot,” according to officials. The action was taken solely to provide consistency with the Future Land Use Map and zoning ordinance. The property was purchased by the city in 1990 and contains no other facilities aside from the water tower.

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About Monroe Roark

Monroe Roark has been covering the news in Henry County for more than a quarter-century, starting in 1992. He has owned homes here and raised a family here. He still enjoys staying on top of the important matters that affect his friends in the community.