Lake Oconee news. (Greensboro, GA) 199?-current, December 29, 2017, Image 1
Your official newspaper serving Greene, Morgan and Putnam counties in Georgia’s Lake Country \ www.LakeOconeeNews.us VOL. 19 NO. 52 FRIDAY DECEMBER 29 2017 75 CENTS GREENE COUNTY Greene sees growth in 2017 Dave Brown dave@lakeoconeenews.us The reports by Rick Zeier, code enforcement officer for the City of Greensboro, at city council meetings used to be mere tales of woe about bulldozing aban doned houses. These days, Zeier provides well-received updates about the status of newbusinesses as the local economy builds onto schools, expands manufacturingfacilities, SEE GROWTH » A8 FRED — Unemployment Rote in Greene County, GA 2.5 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Greene County's unemployment rate continued to fall to 4.5 percent in September 2017. Greene's unemployment rate has not dropped below 4.5 percent since July 2001 (4.1 percent). This trend is consistent with the Georgia unemployment rate which was at 4.4 percent and the Northeast Georgia Region at 4.0 percent in September. Surrounding neighbor counties Oconee and Morgan were slightly lower than Greene at 3.3 and 3.9 percent respectively. (Source: U. S. Bureau of Labor Statistics) T. Michael Stone/Staff Brad Good and his partner Wayne Lamar try to get the Planning and Zoning Commission to see things their way. Madison P&Z rejects Foster Park plan T. Michael Stone michael@lakeoconeenews.us The Madison Planning & Zoning Commission rejected developer Brad Good’s latest Foster Park proposal during last week’s meeting held Dec. 21. The plan calls for retaining the R2 zoning but that would have required 80 zoning variances to be implemented. Good argued that the property is too narrowto create a road with homes on both sides unless zoning requirements regarding lot size, setback and lot width and depth are relaxed for the variances he asked for. Good said that strict adherence to the SEE P&Z » A9 PUTNAM COUNTY County tables rental decision Shannon Sneed shannon@lakeoconeenews.us Commissioner Daniel Brown wasn’t at the Dec. 19 Putnam County BOC meeting to cast the deciding vote whether or not to adopt a short-term rental ordinance with occupancy restrictions, so theboard tabled the item until a later date. SEE RENTALS » A3 index Calendar B4 Churches B6 Classifieds D4 Community B1 Obituaries A6 Opinions A4 Recipes D1 Sports C1 Sports C1 FRIDAY 42/31 Scattered Rain WEATHER »D7 0 94922 87855 7 Published by Smith Communications Inc. NEwsYear in Review FILE PHOTO Hospital leaders join local and state officials to break ground on the new Morgan Memorial Hospital Sept. 19. T. Michael Stone michael@lakeoconeenews.us The past year was full of triumph as well as nearlyunspeakabletragedy. Greene and Morgan counties made substantial progress onmajorprojects and new businesses are coming. January In January, Morgan County took a major step toward a new hospital when the hospital authority approved a letter on conditions to borrow $35 million from the USDA for construc tion. Opponents fought against the new facility and eventually forces hospital authority chairman Terry Evans to resign from theboard as part of deal that ended litigation aimed at stopping the project. The mood was one of celebration on Sept. 19 when members of the authority and other dignitaries held a groundbreaking ceremony on the site. In Putnam County, The Eatonton Messenger learned that Frank Don Causey, the man accused of murder ing Lydia Huggins Ivanditti on Dec. 2, 2016, is wanted by authorities in Tennessee on assault charges. Pretrial hearings get underway in September and the trail starts in November. Causey’s attorney presented sev eral alternatives to Ivanditti’s death, including an accident, a suicide, erotic asphyxiation or that someone else killed her. The state wrapped up its case on Nov. 14. Causey was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison. February The first of several unspeakable tragedies visited upon Lake Country would take place when 2-year-old Phillip Dyson Robb was killed in an accident in Wilkes County. Atriangle of GDOTprojects on 1-20, Hwy 441 and Hwy 44 begin, snarling traffic and frustrating drivers who seemingly can’t go anywhere in Lake Country without construction delays. Azoning controversy smolderingfor months in Morgan County flares up at the Madison City Council meeting when Councilor Chris Hodges sug gests the Planned Residential Districts might be appropriate in Madison’s Historic districts after all. But it doesn’t end there. Developer Brad Good, who proposed a PRD for property between Foster Street and S. Main Street, returns with a brand new plan in June, hoping to convince the Madison City Council to rezone the property R4 from R2. That proposal proved nearly as unattractive to residents of Madison’s Historic District as the PRD. Good was scheduled to present his idea to the Madison City Council on Oct. 9, but the public hearing was abruptly removed from the agenda a few days prior to the council meeting. Opponents of the plan argued the city did not have the right to remove the public hearing from the agenda and reschedule it for a date following the municipal elections. The final showdown appeared set for Nov. 13, but right before the public hearing started, attorneys representing both sides agreed that a compromise might be in order. Good returned with a complicated set of variance, 80 in all, that was rejected SEE REVIEW » A2 Who You Choose To Work With In Real Estate Makes All The Difference., "From the first time we met The Virings, we knew they were the Realtors for us. They did a great job selling our golf cottage when the market for cottages was a little down and then found our dream home in Reynolds. They are simply the best and wouldn't think of using anyone else when it comes to Lake Oconee real estate!" -The Boullains ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ HIGHLY LIKELY TO RECOMMEND FEATURED LISTING 1031 OLD MILL LANE misstate LUXURY HOMES INTERNATIONAL WILLIAMS® REALTY TELEPHONE:706-686-5033-www.Lak