Cherokee County: Gated Country Club for Slow-Growthers
Posted: February 1st, 2007
Category: Woodstock Real Estate
Wednesday, the Cherokee Tribune published the following "Dear Editor" letter…
Cherokee needs to cap population
DEAR EDITOR:
When my wife and I moved to Cherokee a year ago, we assumed that the county would be like Cobb County, where we lived for 24 years. Relentless growth changed Cobb from a wonderful place to live to a suburban nightmare. It now has a population of 663,818 (2005 estimate).
Cherokee went from 141,903 people in 2000 to 184,211 (est.) last year. Forty-two thousand new residents! Compared to little DeKalb County with about 678,000 residents, Cherokee might end up with 1.2 million people.
As Cobb county grew, people were concerned about the problems: traffic, air quality, water restrictions, kids going to school in trailers, crime, and rising taxes. But the message from the media and county commissioners was that growth was a good thing, and also inevitable.
So it is with great joy that I find that Cherokee now has a board of commissioners that may stop residential growth. If so, the developers and greedy landowners will move heaven and earth to see that undone. Right now there’s a housing slump and a good deal of property is already zoned residential so they can bide their time.The land-use plan should limit the population to 200,000. The zoning board should never allow changes that would increase population. "Slow growth" is really slow death for the county.
It would be nice to have more development other than residential: office parks, light industrial, recreational, etc. But as for homes, Cherokee County has enough for now and forevermore.
Robert M. Holroyd II
Woodstock
Mountain Brook was developed by The Landon Group, a local developer who has many quality projects around Cherokee and neighboring counties. The developer purchased the land for Mountain Brook several years ago and pledged to not develop up the side of Little Sweat Mountain in order to preserve it for future residents (including Mr. Holroyd II). In fact he placed 100+ acres (almost 40% of the total acreage) in a Land Preservation Trust never to be disturbed. The developer also set aside another 40+ acres for common areas, including preserving an existing lake to be enjoyed by all residents of Mountain Brook. It’s no wonder Mr. Holroyd II enjoys his scenic Cherokee County Gated Country Club, or I mean his home in Mountain Brook.
He gets to enjoy Cherokee County and his 100+ acre preserve as a neighbor for the low price of only $234,800 (he got 0.000 acres for that price). Do you think Mr. Holroyd II could afford to buy all 100+ acres and the lake and the additional 40 acres of common space? Maybe he can, but the point is he didn’t have to because one of those "greedy landowners" sold to a developer who took the risk and paid the expense for him. He should be thanking landowners and developers, not bad-mouthing everything that happened to allow him access to the assumed paradise of Cherokee County.
Am I the only one who sees the hypocrisy of "slow-growth" advocates who just recently moved into Cherokee County?
Then he goes on to make my favorite complaint…"
It would be nice to have more development other than residential: office parks, light industrial, recreational, etc." Maybe he overlooked the 43+ acres in front of Mountain Brook that has yet to be developed because it is zoned for commercial use? There is already approval for placing 263,000+/- square feet of restaurants, office, shops, recreation gyms, etc… right in front of Mr. Holroyd II’s neigborhood. The only reason it doesn’t exist now is that the market has not created a need. You see, commercial businesses exist only to make a profit. They do not see any profits to be made yet at that place in Cherokee County or you can rest assured there would be something built already. The zoning is in place, the utilities are there, the access is great, the only thing missing is the people. It takes customers to make businesses successful and companies tend open where customers will likely visit.In order for Cherokee to grow more commercial, office, and industrial it will take more houses and people moving into the county. Companies invest where they can hire quality people at reasonable rates and reach a viable target demographic. These things will come to Cherokee, but only if the residents are here in larger numbers and more diverse demographics…which takes more housing, more development, and more selling of existing land by those "greedy landowners".
I didn’t even get into the fact that "slow-growth" advocates like Mr. Holroyd II only care about their desires and not other resident’s property rights!
Brad Nix
Woodstock, GA
References: The Glens at Mountain Brook, The Bluffs at Mountain Brook
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Great post, Brad!
Although I can appreciate the idea of controlled growth… some people want to stop it entirely - without considering the consequences.
You highlight those consequences quite well.