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©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Commission
approves Lake Creek Lodge expansion Voting
6-0 the Jefferson County Planning Commission last week approved Gordon Jones'
proposed expansion at Camp Sherman's Lake Creek Lodge.
The new owner plans to add
24 cabins and a new meeting hall on the 42-acre historic site located
on Road 1419. Presently, there are 17 cabins and the lodge on the property
and these will be refurbished along with improvements to the present swimming
pool and tennis courts.
Phase 1 of the project calls
for construction of two new cabins on the north portion of the property
across from Pine Lodge Road. Phase 2 will include construction of a new
septic system for the project at an estimated cost of $300,000. Later
phases will complete the project.
Jones, the single property
owner, plans to sell the 41 cabins to individual owners. These owners
will have six months of cabin use per year with the other six months offering
rental use split into roughly four equal quarters. Jones and the cabin
owners will split rental fees on a 60:40 basis. Room tax (6 percent) will
be collected by Jefferson County for cabin occupancy other than by owners.
The 24 new three-bedroom,
three-bath cabins will be 1,350 square feet with 550 square feet of deck
space and interior fireplaces. The 17 older cabins will be refurbished
to match the new cabins but will not be enlarged from their present size.
At a highly vocal meeting
on June 12 (see The Nugget, June 18, 2003), several speakers raised concerns
about the project with the Jefferson County commissioners. At that meeting
it was decided to allow seven days for more comments before any decision
was rendered. A decision would then be made at the July 10 meeting but
no new input would be allowed during deliberation by the commissioners.
At the decision meeting, Butch
Parker, Community Development Administrator, told the commissioners that
county legal counsel had said the project would comply with existing land
use planning.
Commission members voiced
several concerns during their discussion. Chairperson Don Martin mentioned
traffic and density;members Kay Moon and Roy Hyder voiced concern about
traffic patterns on Road 1419; and member Evan Thomas questioned the single-owner
concept and monitoring room-tax enforcement.
But the concerns did not impede
the unanimous vote.
One commissioner noted that
self-interest and public scrutiny would help ensure an appropriate project.
"It doesn't make sense for
the new owner to tear things up," said Martin.
"With the eyes of Camp Sherman
on him, he'll have to tip-toe through the tulips with his project."
Jones had submitted a five-page
list of conditions that he would agree to in trying to answer some of
the local community concerns over the size and scope of his project.
These addressed parking, lighting,
pedestrian/bike path access, water rights with neighbors, meeting hall
occupancy, an archeological assessment, a wildlife overlay zone, development
of a riparian corridor and a time limitation of five years for obtaining
all permits for construction.
Along with Martin, Gannon,
Hyder, Moon and Thomas, commissioner Dick Dodson also voted in favor of
the plan. Commission member Kim Seeley was absent.
Questioned after the commission
vote, Jones said, "I'm very pleased with the decision. I want to live
in Camp Sherman and work with the local community."
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