Dayton Daily News

Land Near Lebanon targeted for growth

Turtlecree­k Twp. plan will map out uses for 25-square-mile area.

- By Lawrence Budd Staff Writer

TURTLECREE­K TWP. — A group of Warren County residents and officials has begun planning the future of a 25-square-mile area in the path of developmen­t for the growing together of Dayton and Cincinnati.

The Eastern Turtlecree­k Plan is expected to map out the preferred land uses, roads, open space and commercial developmen­t of the 16,000-acre study area. Today the area east of Lebanon and west of the Little Miami River is primarily farmland.

“Lots of farms, lots of prime farmland,” Turtlecree­k Twp. Trustee Jon Sams said. “By good fortune, it gives us the opportunit­y to be a part of the growing region and still enjoy all these great things about Turtlecree­k Township.”

Turtlecree­k Township encom- passes the racino and prisons just east of Interstate 75 on Ohio 63 and the Pilot Flying J truck stop at Ohio 123 and Interstate 71.

It also includes the Warren County Sports Park and Union Village, a 1,400-acre planned community under constructi­on west of Lebanon near Ohio 741 and Ohio 63. More than 15,000 people live in the township.

The area under study stretches around the city of Lebanon east from Ohio 48 north to Ohio 73.

It crosses Interstate 71 near the area around the Fort Ancient Earthworks and Nature Preserve. Fruit farms, parks, agritouris­m and YMCA’s Camp Kern are also within its boundaries.

The plan is the latest in a series designed to chart the future for all

65 square miles of the township.

Last week, regional planning staffers met with a citizen committee expected to help shape the plan with community input leading to approval in 18 months by township trustees and county commission­ers.

U.S. Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, whose family owns the Golden Lamb Inn in Lebanon, and Lebanon City Manager Scott Brunka are on the draft list of potential committee members.

“The City currently provides utility service to properties within the planning area, and we have a Joint Economic Developmen­t District with Turtlecree­k Township at the S.R. 123 / I-71 interchang­e. The City has reached out to Turtlecree­k Township to take part in City planning initiative­s that may impact their jurisdicti­on in the past,” Brunka said in an email.

Also on a list of possible members are major landowners like Ken Natorp, who owns land near the interchang­e of Ohio 123 and I-71, along with business owners and residents.

“Because it’s more rural, we’d like to preserve that as much as we can,” said John Smith, a 30-plus year resident on the committee. “I think it will be successful if it reflects the majority of people in Eastern Turtlecree­k Township.”

A focus area of the study is the Genntown area, just north of the Walmart and shopping center on U.S. 42 on the northeast edge of Lebanon. Some property owners apparently want to sell their land for commercial developmen­t.

“I want to hear from those people,” Sams said.

At the same time, the planners have heard from residents, including Smith, that they don’t want developmen­ts like the one around the Walmart any closer to them.

“They are willing to drive for amenities and convenienc­es,” said Stan Williams, executive director of the Warren County Regional Planning Commission, whose staff is directing the planning process.

The citizen committee next meets Jan. 16. A public hearing and final vote on the plan by county commission­ers is expected in January 2020.

“Turtlecree­k Township wants to make sure the zoning, the developmen­t that occurs is consistent with the residents’ vision for Turtlecree­k Township,” Williams said. “We want to make sure that the growth that occurs there furthers the vision for the area.”

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