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Commercial Development Proposed Inside Wilderness Battlefield

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  • Commercial Development Proposed Inside Wilderness Battlefield

    Wilderness Project Is Likely To Fail Orange Public Hearings Tomorrow

    Public hearing set on Wilderness Crossing proposal, but county approval unlikely

    BY ROBIN KNEPPER

    Free Lance-Star [Fredericksburg, Va.]
    July 18, 2007

    The public will get a chance to comment tomorrow on a a controversial rezoning request that would permit a commercial development on land in the Wilderness battlefield in Orange County.

    But the proposal for Wilderness Crossing already appears dead in the water, based on interviews with several county officials and others involved in the plan.

    Instead, at least 63 of the 177 acres involved may soon be added to the Fredericksburg-Spotsylvania National Military Park.

    Several county officials and others familiar with the project agreed to discuss the situation with Wilderness Crossing and other possible development in the area. But they asked not to be identified because the public has not yet had a chance to comment on the proposal, and some aspects are still in negotiation.

    They said they expect the Planning Commission to take the first official step toward killing the development plan tomorrow night after its public hearing on the rezoning request. Supervisors are likely to finish it off when it comes before them later.

    Charles "Chip" King, who owns three of the four parcels of land in the proposed commercial development, has tried to persuade the county to approve the project so he can get the right of way for a road he wants to build. King proposes his new road to be the new alignment for State Route 20.

    The road would be four lanes, divided, and would start about a mile southwest of the present intersection of Route 20 with State Route 3. The new Route 20 would intersect at the south side of Route 3 about a third of a mile west of the present intersection, just beyond Sheetz and McDonald's.

    It would provide a direct connection with a road being discussed as a possibility for the north side of Route 3. That road would be an entrance into a possible development on 1,900 acres King owns running north to the Rapidan River and east to Spotsylvania County.

    Orange County has designated that property as a "mega-site," ripe for development into a business, commercial and/or industrial center. But several hundred acres are also seen as possible sites for a county reservoir and future water and sewer plants.

    The primary reason the Wilderness Crossing rezoning appears doomed is that King's proposed four-lane road would run through land designated by Congress as part of the Wilderness battlefield.

    Although the land is privately owned, it is considered historically significant and the National Park Service would like to acquire it.

    The Park Service has opposed Route 20 expansion plans in the past because they involved battlefield land. Orange County supervisors have conceded that they are not going to tangle with the agency over that subject any more.

    Locust Grove businessman Ken Dotson owns the fourth parcel in the Wilderness Crossing site and serves as agent for the proposed rezoning.

    The Park Service has offered Dotson $1.1 million for his 63 acres, but he is asking $1.6 million. The Civil War Preservation Trust has stepped in and is expected to cover the full price.

    "We're very interested in buying the property," said CWPT spokesman Jim Campi. "It's most important to us to acquire this land and set it aside for preservation.

    "When it's appropriate, we'll turn it over to the park service. It makes sense for the park service to own it, but we can move faster [on real estate deals] and we can often pay more."




    Eric
    Eric J. Mink
    Co. A, 4th Va Inf
    Stonewall Brigade

    Help Preserve the Slaughter Pen Farm - Fredericksburg, Va.

  • #2
    Re: Commercial Development Proposed Inside Wilderness Battlefield

    * For those of you who attended the May living history at Wilderness Battlefield, these two tracts of land are directly across from the entrance to Ellwood.


    Orange spurns Wilderness Crossing

    Orange planners recommend denial of Wilderness Crossing rezoning request

    BY ROBIN KNEPPER

    The Free Lance-Star [Fredericksburg, Va.]
    July 21, 2007

    As expected, the Orange County Planning Commission gave a unanimous thumbs-down this week to a rezoning request that would put a four-lane road through the Wilderness battlefield.

    But they also turned down a seemingly routine rezoning request from the county's Economic Development Authority.

    And to finish off their long, raucous meeting Thursday night, they barely passed the county's request for a special-use permit to build a new middle school.

    All three issues will go to the Board of Supervisors with the commission's recommendations. The board's public hearing on the Wilderness Crossing proposal is set for Aug. 28.

    Locust Grove businessman Ken Dotson presented the rezoning request for Wilderness Crossing, a proposed commercial and retail development on 177 acres of land designated by Congress as part of the Wilderness battlefield.

    Dotson owns one 63-acre parcel in the development. It is expected to be purchased by the Civil War Preservation Trust and given to the National Park Service to become part of Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park.

    The other three parcels are owned by Charles "Chip" King. Two front on State Route 3 west of its intersection with State Route 20.

    Dotson told planning commissioners that King had authorized him to offer all of that land to the Park Service at no cost if he were given permission by the Park Service to build a four-lane divided road to replace the northern-most part of Route 20. The new road would exit on Route 3 west of Sheetz and McDonald's opposite land owned by King that is ripe for commercial development.

    Questioned later, local Park Service Superintendent Russ Smith said he didn't recall hearing that offer.

    "It might have come up at some time but I would have said no," he said.

    Smith said he was "very pleased" with the Planning Commission's vote to recommend denial of the rezoning request. He acknowledged that commercial development is needed in the area, but not on battlefield land.

    "It's not in the best interests of Orange County to degrade its tourism resources," he said.

    Comments at the public hearing and by planning commissioners were unanimous against the Dotson/King project, but brought forth shared interest and support for commercial development along the Route 3 corridor.

    Dotson said he and King sought the rezoning to prompt the county and Park Service to discuss traffic and development.

    "We were forced to take this position [applying for a rezoning for the battlefield land] because the Park Service wouldn't allow the road," he continued. "It was an expensive way to talk to the Planning Commission, but we've planted the seed for commercial and retail development in the area."




    Eric
    Eric J. Mink
    Co. A, 4th Va Inf
    Stonewall Brigade

    Help Preserve the Slaughter Pen Farm - Fredericksburg, Va.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Commercial Development Proposed Inside Wilderness Battlefield

      This I received from the CWPT.


      To: Supporters of the Wilderness Battlefield

      Thanks again to everyone that was able to attend the Orange County Planning Commission meeting on July 19 to show your opposition to the Wilderness Crossing development proposal. Your attendance helped turn the tide in our favor!

      On Tuesday, August 28, the Orange County Board of Supervisors will hold a public hearing to consider the same rezoning application. As you all know, it is the Board of Supervisors that has the final say on rezoning matters. Please consider attending the August 28 hearing to speak out against the proposed development. They only have to win once, but we have to win every time!

      To view how this proposal would impact the battlefield, please see the properties shaded in yellow on the following maps:

      Fighting along Orange Turnpike, May 5, 1864
      Sorry, the page you were looking for doesn’t exist. Have you tried our keyword search? Go to the homepage or email us at web@battlefields.org if we...


      Fighting along Orange Turnpike, May 6, 1864
      Sorry, the page you were looking for doesn’t exist. Have you tried our keyword search? Go to the homepage or email us at web@battlefields.org if we...


      WHAT: Board of Supervisors Hearing on the Wilderness Crossing Rezoning
      WHEN: Tuesday, August 28 at 7:00pm
      WHERE: Gordon Building, 112 West Main St., Orange



      Eric
      Eric J. Mink
      Co. A, 4th Va Inf
      Stonewall Brigade

      Help Preserve the Slaughter Pen Farm - Fredericksburg, Va.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Commercial Development Proposed Inside Wilderness Battlefield

        Rezoning denied!!!


        Orange supervisors reject rezoning for development in Wilderness area

        Orange supervisors reject commercial development in Wilderness area

        BY ROBIN KNEPPER

        The Free Lance-Star [Fredericksburg, Va.]
        August 31, 2007

        Orange County supervisors have rejected a rezoning request for a commercial development in the Wilderness area, ending--at least for now--a battle that has been raging for over three decades.

        As expected, Orange County supervisors unanimously voted no Tuesday night to Wilderness Crossing, a proposed 177-acre commercial development by Kenny Dotson and Charles "Chip" King. The project would have skirted parts of the Wilderness battlefield, which is owned by the Department of Interior, and also infringed on areas Congress has authorized for acquisition as part of the Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park.

        Because the National Park Service has refused to consider four-laning State Route 20 on its present alignment through the Civil War battlefield land, the commercial-development proposal called for a new road to bypass the two-lane road and intersect with State Route 3 between the McDonald's restaurant and Lake of the Woods.

        After supervisors rejected his plan, Dotson admitted what many suspected: that the Wilderness Crossing proposal was simply an attempt to get the supervisors to push the Park Service to allow the four-laning of Route 20 and a new intersection at Route 3.

        "Our true intent was never to develop the property," he said. "We just wanted to have the leverage to do something about the road. I was trying to get the county to step up to the plate. I spent $40,000 to create a bluff."

        Dotson offered last-minute proffers, which included offering to sell the 63 acres he owns to the Civil War Preservation Trust. He also reiterated King's pledge to donate the rest of the land to the Park Service in exchange for a 125-foot right of way for a new four-lane road from Route 20 to Route 3 that would include space for intersection upgrades.

        Dotson said the CWPT has not responded to his offer.

        "They've accomplished their goal by nothing happening," he said. "But we still need a viable road network."

        In 2006, a grant-funded study of Route 20 recommended that a four-lane road be built west of the present alignment in order to handle the increased traffic expected within the next 30 years.

        But the battle to widen Route 20 has been raging off and on for the past three decades, according to old-timers in the county. The last big skirmish was in the late 1990s, when supervisors appeared ready to push the county's representatives in Congress to get involved.

        At that time, Supervisor Mark Johnson called the Park Service's position "ridiculous." But last year, Johnson appeared to surrender.

        Now chairman of the board, he said it was fruitless to try to expand the road through the battlefield.




        Eric
        Eric J. Mink
        Co. A, 4th Va Inf
        Stonewall Brigade

        Help Preserve the Slaughter Pen Farm - Fredericksburg, Va.

        Comment

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