The Commercial Appeal

Desoto planners like building permit trend

- By Henry Bailey Jr.

Single-family building permits issued in July continued a brisk track upward in a hopeful sign for the DeSoto economy, county planners said.

Meanwhile, opponents of a proposed 300-foot-tall C Spire cell tower near their western DeSoto County homes placed high hopes in a pledge by company officials to consider an alternate site near a fire station and not “force” anything on residents.

“People in the housing industry are still cautious about saying there’s an upward trend, but we’ve seen more people coming in for permits, more permits for subdivisio­ns, so things appear to be improving,” said Tom Haysley, deputy to DeSoto planning director Ted Garrod.

Across the county for July, there were 91 single-family permits, up 13 from 78 in June for a 34 percent month-to-month increase, and up 27 from 64 in July 2012 for a 41 percent hike over the year-ago figure, said Haysley. There were no multifamil­y permits issued in July, and just two mobile home permits.

Total permit activity for 2013 to date is 520, a hefty 20 percent increase over the 435 reported for the year-ago period.

“The market certainly hasn’t rebounded to pre-recession levels, but we’re heading in the right direction, on track to beat 2012’s year-end figure of 730 after the lows of the previous years,” said Supervisor Mark Gardner, board president and a Southaven Realtor. In 2007, 1,687 single-family permits were recorded as the recession hit and the housing market reeled; permit activity bottomed at 454 in 2010 and 456 in 2011.

“We’re seeing an increase in traffic within our model homes for sale; there’s been a slow, gradual climb since the second quarter of 2012,” said builder David Grant, owner of Colliervil­le-based Keith and David Grant Homes. He said he’s cautiously optimistic and busy “with about 40 percent of our homes in DeSoto County.”

The planning officials reported to the county Board of Supervisor­s this week on permit activity and the status of an appeal of the Board of Adjustment’s approval of a conditiona­l use sought by C Spire for the cell tower.

Garrod asked for and received a sixmonth continuati­on, to Feb. 18, 2014, of a public hearing by county supervisor­s on an appeal by Fred Smith, a western DeSoto County resident who says a tower near his property would impair values and pose health risks. The extra time will allow C Spire to consider an alternate site and has Smith’s endorsemen­t, said the county planning chief.

C Spire’s original applicatio­n seeks to erect a tower on the west side of Horn Lake Road and south of Nesbit Road. Terrell Knight, Ridgeland, Miss.-based director of government issues for C Spire, said the company is studying another site near the Nesbit fire station about a mile northeast, close to Tulane Road.

“We’re not going to force anything down the residents’ throats,” said Knight.

He said the location under review is lower than the original, and a taller tower may be needed: “It would cost us more money, but we think it’s the right thing to do.”

“Our constituen­ts really appreciate that you’re willing to consider the alternativ­es,” Supervisor Lee Caldwell of Nesbit told Knight. Caldwell also is a proponent of plugging service gaps in broadband and cell service in DeSoto County.

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