Hendersonville Lightning: MPO rejects Flat Rock’s appeal to kill road project

From the Hendersonville Lightning online:

Pinecrest Presbyterian Church shipped a busload of commenters and dozens more filled the meeting room as the French Broad River MPO took up the Highland Lake Road project on Thursday in the most crucial vote to date on the project.

After more than 90 minutes of public comment and discussion by the board voted against a motion to kill the project, turning back efforts by the newly elected Village Council to derail the road job. The vote was the most signficant one yet on the future of the $2.9 million project. The French Broad MPO has the authority to remove projects from the state transportation improvement plan (STIP), an action it took in 2018 when it voted to remove the Balfour Parkway from the STIP.  But in that case, the Henderson County Board of Commissioners voted 4-1 to kill the project. At Thursday’s meeting, representatives of Hendersonville and Henderson County explained that their boards had voted to support the project from a wider perspective.

The MPO vote came after passionate appeals on both side, with opponents outnumbering supporters, and a 50-minute discussion by board members. Village Council member Anne Coletta, newly appointed to represent Flat Rock on the MPO, urged the MPO to endorse Flat Rock’s resolution to kill the project. The Village Council votes in December came before the Henderson County Transportation Advisory Council voted 8-1 to continue the project and the Hendersonville City Council and Henderson County Board of Commissioners voted unanimously to support the project instead of kill it.

Coletta argued that the majority of Flat Rock residents had opposed the road project since it became public, had organized and signed petitions to oppose it and sent a clear message in a village election that was essentially a referendum on the project.

“For the first time in Flat Rock history we had an election with all council seats contested and we had an informed, educated and motivated electorate,” she said. “This is the voice of our community. This is the voice you need to hear.”

According to research Coletta had done on past resolutions, the French Broad MPO had never failed to endorse a town’s request to cancel a project until Thursday, Village Council member Tom Carpenter said after the vote.

“The whole council has to talk it over,” he said when asked what the next step might be in the fight to stop the project. “We don’t want to do anything behind the scenes. I don’t know if there’s an appeal process.”

Coletta told the MPO the list of reasons the majority of voters in Flat Rock and the council opposes the project: It is not a priority for the NCDOT, it is at 30 percent of capacity, the improvements increase speed “by removing natural speed governors,” the project would take private property and village property for a “nonessential purpose” and it would remove dozens of mature trees, including the buffer of evergreens at Pinecrest Presbyterian Church.

Division 14 Engineer Brian Burch, of the NCDOT, explained that the project’s purpose is to improve the width of the travel lanes and shoulders and provide pedestrian and bicycle connectivity. Although the original design called for a widening of the travel lanes from 11 to 14 feet, engineers later retreated from that and kept the width at 11 feet, with two-foot shoulders on the south side. The project also includes left turn lanes at Highland Park Road and Highland Lake Drive and at a new entrance to the Park at Flat Rock. The NCDOT’s projections showed that congestion “will exceed generally accepted levels” if the project was not done.

Several board members said that the votes of other boards in Henderson County were a significant factor to consider.

Larry Harris of Black Mountain and Julie Mayfield of Asheville said votes by the county’s Transportation Advisory Board and the Board of Commissioners were signficant [sic] because those boards represent a countywide perspective.

“The city and the county voted highly in favor of the project,” Harris said. “Those are still the numbers and that’s what we’re dealing with today.”

“When I ran for office I knew there was going to be tough decisions and this is one of those tough decisions,” County Commissioner Rebecca McCall said. “I have to represent all the people of Henderson County, not just a small group. Yes, most of the road goes through the village of Flat Rock but it’s right along the edige [sic] of the village of Flat Rock and like it or not that road is a connector Greenville Highway to Spartanburg Highway and directly across to I-26. Flat Rock offers the Flat Rock Playhouse, the Carl Sandburg home, multiple B&Bs and multiple restaurants. I feel like it’s our responsbility [sic] to provide safe transportation into the village of Flat Rock to participate in those venues.”

When Coletta offered a motion to support the village resolution, no one offered a second until, after a few minutes of discussion, Brownie Newman seconded the motion so board members could take a vote. When Chair Bill Lapsley called for a vote, only Coletta voted yes.

6 thoughts on “Hendersonville Lightning: MPO rejects Flat Rock’s appeal to kill road project

Add yours

  1. So, if the people don’t need it and the people don’t want it, who is pushing this agenda – who benefits directly ($$$) from this project? DOT awards contracts to have roads built… Let’s think about this.

    Like

  2. Seriously, how come 225A warranted a 3.5 million dollar roundabout (with finishing touches continuing to this day)…?
    IT DOESN’T
    Follow the money.

    Like

  3. @Anonymous 9.27pm…

    …ask yourself this — in Flat Rock, who parks the most buses and cars on a daily basis?

    Week-in week-out, 52-weeks per year…

    …your guess?

    Like

  4. Okay, let’s regroup.
    Is there any way to cut the multi-use path through the Park from 10 feet down to 5 feet like the section that goes along the highway and tie it into existing paths in the Park rather than having it be an eyesore along the road? They’re taking land from our Park, and we should still have a say.
    I hope this isn’t over.

    Like

Leave a reply to Billy Thomas Cancel reply

Create a website or blog at WordPress.com

Up ↑