Council wrestles with Hayes development strategy BY SEAN JACKSON Staff Writer The Edenton Planning Board rejected a rezoning re quest by Hayes Plantation’s owners May 14, and Monday night the Town Council dis cussed the protocol of how it should handle the request in the future. Town Attorney Charles Busby said council should only focus on if the proposed devel opment of the historic farm tract will harm the safety, health and welfare of sur rounding properties and the town. Developers have plans to erect numerous homes and several commercial districts on the 1,500-acre tract over a 50 year span. That plan could bring thou sands of citizens to Chowan County and Edenton. The property is actually in the county and just east of Edenton. But the town’s zoning map would need to be amended to allow for the large-scale de velopment of the site. Busby said council should narrow its, focus during the rezoning request. Any con cerns about future traffic or water/sewer issues could be handled at later discussions and public hearings, since the developers will have to come before council multiple times. “It’s not a question of aes thetics. It’s not a gut question,” Busby said of what council should consider during the first phase of the request. “It’s (a question of) does it promote health, safety and welfare.” Busby said even if develop ers were to offer specifics about what they intend to do at Hayes, the rezoning process does not bind them to any set plans. The process simply al lows the zoning to change from R-40—which allows only large lot sizes — to R-5 and R-10, which contain much smaller lots, allowing for a higher den sity of homes. Hayes property owner Gilliam Wood and developers previewed their proposal with council at an April meeting. The same presentation was given to the Planning Board last week, Councilman Steve Biggs said Monday. About 15 people spoke at the May 14 planning meeting, but no opponents of the pro posed development were on hand for Monday’s council session. The Planning Board unani mously vetoed the rezoning request last week. But coun cil can overturn that rejec tion, which is merely a rec ommendation to council. Biggs asked Busby if he should discuss the project with developers when not in public meetings. Biggs said he had been “invited” to talk with the developers about the issua “I don’t think that serves a useful purpose,” Busby said. Edenton-Chowan planner .Elizabeth Bryant said Biggs and other town officials are not barred by state law from meeting with the developers. Busby said the town is in full control of what is done or not done with the site since sewage service would likely become a major factor for the success or failure of the project. With the new zoning classification, septic systems could not be used. Sewage lines would have to be installed for the smaller R 5 and R-10 zonings. “It’s not the Town of Edenton’s responsibility,” to install sewer lines at the pro posed development, Busby said. He also said the town could change the zoning of the site in the future if the develop ment were to ever appear to pose a potential threat to the health, safety, and welfare of surrounding residents and properties. Councilman Jerry Parks said some opponents of the project — many at the May 14 meeting were from the Vil lage Creek Subdivision, just north of Hayes — simply “don’t want it to happen.” Parks suggested that coun cil has an opportunity to make a development decision that hasn’t been offered much in the past. “We actually have an op portunity to say this is what we want Edenton to look like,” he said. “I see it as an exciting opportunity, but it’s been veiled in controversy, apparently.” Mayor Roland Vaughan said developer Bob Chapman has indicated it would take him and his staff a year to 18 months to develop a thor ough plan for the project. May flies bye.. BY EARLINE WHITE Staff Writer One of the many signs of an upcoming spring is the frequent showers, the longer daylight hours and the appearance of our old friends - the mayflies. This year was just like the others, though our friends did come a bit late. They came, they bred, molted on our windows, and died all within a week’s span. That is the way of the Mayfly “Mayflies hatch and live for 12-24 hours in or near the water,” confirmed Katy Gray, Chowan County Extension Agent. “They are adapted to aquatic life. Mayflies have transparent wings with long forked tails. There are over 600 species,” Gray said after reading “Golden Guide to Insects” which she called a ‘great resource’. Marjorie Rayburn, Area Specialist Extension Agent for Water Quality and Commercial Horticulture in Gates County agreed with Gray, “I don’t know if they are ‘worse’ in Chowan County than the other counties surrounding us, but we do have a fairly high popula Staff photo by Earline White Mayflies coat the window of a downtown Edenton business. They are a familiar sight in our community this time of year. tion because of our proxim ity to the water.” Mating of mayflies occurs around dusk or dawn. Eggs may be laid while the female is in flight skimming across the water or below the surface among the vegeta tion. The egg hatches into a nymph, or baby mayfly, See MAYFLIES Page 8-A Several events saluting vet erans are planned in Chowan County over the next week. The first is a World War IT Memorial Dedication plan ned for Saturday, May 29. Ed ward G, Bond Post 40 of the American Legion Post 40 for . ——- ■ ’ ■ n all wwn veterans and their significant others. The festivi ties will begin at 11 a.m. with an informal gathering as they come together to share expe riences. ' ' • See SERVICE On Page 3-A - t . Staff photo by Saan Jackson Town workers deal with a damage tree twisted in power lines on N. Broad St. Monday morning. Erin Christina Potocki Valedictorian Eric Anthony Sliva Salutatorian Holmes seniors graduate Friday More than 160 John A. Holmes High School seniors are expected to graduate May 28, to become, with the turn of a tassel, the Class of 2005. Rehearsal for the ceremony is scheduled for 9 a.m. on the 28th, and is required in order to participate in the evening Commencement. Seniors will receive four tickets each at the Friday rehearsal. The Commencement Cer emony is scheduled for 7 p.m. at the Athletic Complex. Graduating students must re port to the Holmes Commons by 6 p.m. If it’s raining on Friday evening, the Commencement Ceremony will be rescheduled to 10 a.m. on Saturday Gradu ating seniors should meet in the Commons at 9 a.m. If it’s still raining on Satur day morning, Commencement will move to Swain Audito rium at 10 a.m. The Swain au ditorium Will open to the pub lic at 9 a.m. Guests must have tickets to enter the audito rium. Guests should park in the courthouse lot or in city lots; all Swain parking spaces See GRADUATE Page 3-A Gusty wind\ rain cause outages BY SEAN JACKSON Staff Writer Gusty winds from a Sunday evening storm knocked out power in several parts of Edenton. The storm littered streets and yards with limbs and leaves, while heavy rains cov ered roadways. “Our system had pockets of outages,” Town Manager Anne-Marie Knighton said. Areas south of town at Cape Colony and near Northeastern See DAMAGE On Page 3-A OLF battle heats up as lawsuits, words fly Last in a series BY SEAN JACKSON Staff Writer Battle lines have been drawn in the OLF debate, and some state and federal politicians are staying out of the line of fire. Some elected leaders have openly joined the opponents, while others have either said little publicly or have been ac cused of quietly siding with supporters of the U.S. Navy’s plans to build an outlying land ing Reid in Washington and' Beaufort counties. This vehicle reading "No Farms, No Jobs, No OLF" sums up criticism of the proposed field: all the noise, none of the benefits, they say, will be coming to Washington County and surrounding communities. Roper Mayor Bunny Sanders is tired of such hedging by po litical leaders. Specifically, she wants Gov. Mike Easley to come out against the OLF, which will consume more than 30,000 acres of prime farmland in Washington and Beaufort counties. “The state should join the lawsuit,” she said, referring to legal action OLF opponents %nd nature conservationists have taken against the Navy. She said Easley and other state officials “have a respon sibility to protect the lives and property” of all North Carolin ians, including those east of I 95. “And, by God, I don’t see them doing that,” Sanders said during an interview last month. “They have left us on our own to fight the battle.” Beyond the local level, both U.S. Rep. Frank Ballance, D N.C., and state Sen. Marc Basnight, a Manteo Democrat, have led the charge against the OLF since the Navy’s Sept. 10 announcement that Washing ton County would house the airfield for the new Super Hor net fighter jets. See OLF On Page 8-A INSIDE THIS WEEK Hurricane season nears _1-C Local teen rides atop horsing world_9-A Preschoolers visit fish hatchery...... 5-C Cycle Speedway on the go 1-B