Dayton Daily News

NEW PLAN TO ASSIST GREENE CO. AIRPORT

Mechanics, instructor­s will have room to work in modular buildings.

- By Richard Wilson Staff Writer

Space is at a premium at the Greene County Lewis A. Jackson Regional Airport, where the main hangar is crowded with aircraft stored for the winter or being serviced by MacAir Aviation.

But a plan by MacAir to combine 10 used modular buildings into two larger buildings will provide much-needed space for mechanics to work and for flight instructio­n.

Once the 8.3-acre sewage-system drain field is subtracted, the plan fails to meet open space requiremen­ts, said McNamee, representi­ng neighbors Randy and Victoria Powell.

McNamee and neighbors raised other issues, such as the effect of traffic from the developmen­t.

But the commission­ers seemed ready to approve the plan, which was recommende­d for conditiona­l approval by the regional planning commission and township trustees, except for the open-space question.

Grossmann and Commission­er Dave Young urged the neighbors to consider the likely increase in their property values resulting from the subdivisio­n by developer Mike Williams, who built last year’s Homearama developmen­t.

“This 70 acres is going to have houses on it,” said Young, while also suggesting the communal sewage treatment system proposed was better than individual septic systems on each home site.

While the neighbors currently plan to continue living there, Grossmann suggested they would benefit when they — or later generation­s — sell their property.

“At some point, everybody does that,” he said.

Owner Stephen Deger said Williams was the first prospectiv­e buyer in five years he had been marketing the property.

Williams said the plan was preferable to a 35-home subdivisio­n operating off separate septic systems, permitted under existing zoning. He pledged to complete a “high-quality” project, if the developmen­t plan is approved.

Lebanon city limits are nearby. County sewers are 1,700 feet away, according to county records submitted for the meeting.

Lebanon wound up providing sewer service to the Homearama developmen­t, Highlands at Heritage Hill, originally proposed on a septic system, just south of city limits.

After the meeting, McNamee said he sent the commission­ers a legal opinion “so they can evaluate what the possible consequenc­es might be if the developmen­t is approved as submitted.”

The opinion warns that approval of Williams’ plan “would result in my clients having legal recourse against the county and the developer to prevent the proposed developmen­t.”

Also, McNamee criticized commission­ers’ comments during the public hearing.

“The Board’s focus on the developer’s perceived reputation, for instance, or the ‘inevitabil­ity’ of the developmen­t, has no place in this zoning decision and cannot form a basis for its approval of the applicatio­n,” McNamee said in the opinion letter.

On Tuesday, the commission­ers are to resume discussion and expected to decide whether to approve the planned-unit developmen­t.

 ?? RICHARD WILSON / STAFF ?? MacAir Aviation, the fixed-base operator at Greene County Lewis A. Jackson Airport, is adding buildings this year to accommodat­e growth.
RICHARD WILSON / STAFF MacAir Aviation, the fixed-base operator at Greene County Lewis A. Jackson Airport, is adding buildings this year to accommodat­e growth.
 ?? RICHARD WILSON / STAFF ?? MacAir Aviation, the fixed-base operator at Greene County Lewis A. Jackson Airport, is adding 10 used modular buildings this year to accommodat­e growth.
RICHARD WILSON / STAFF MacAir Aviation, the fixed-base operator at Greene County Lewis A. Jackson Airport, is adding 10 used modular buildings this year to accommodat­e growth.

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