AT HOLDEN BEACH State Promises Relief Along Bumpy Boulevard BY DOUG RUTTKR The bumpy drive along Ocean Boulevard ai Holdcn Beach should change to smooth sailing before the end of the year. State transportation officials told town commissioners last week the state plans to repair and resurface at least half of the boulevard this fall and the remainder during the fol lowing fiscal year. Doug Bowers and Jim Cook, di vision and district engineers with the N.C. Department of Transportation (DOT), met with town officials last Wednesday to discuss improvements along the state road which runs parallel to the shoreline at Holden Beach. Bowers said the DOT plans to patch the existing pavement, level the road where necessary and top it off with about 1 1/2 inches of as phalt. Due to lack of funds, howev er, the project will be completed over a period of two fiscal years. Before hearing the good news last week, town officials grumbled about the condition of the road, which is the major traffic route on the island. They said it has deterio rated over the years under the weight of heavy construction equip ment. Ccinniissioncr Kcr.ner Amos said the boulevard hasn't been improved in six or seven years and hasn't been capped in about 10 years. "It's received a ioi of abuse since then," he said. "It's getting rough, it's cav ing in on the sides." Mayor John Tandy compared the drive along one of the most heavily used sections of the street to a ride at an amusement park. "Right around the pier you think you're on a roller coaster...," he said. "We just need to do something." Since resurfacing funds are limit ed, Bowers said the DOT cannot af mmw'ii? Mi il inn" mm if SWF PHOTO BY DOUG Kl/TTM THIS STRETCH of Ocean Boulevard Wti/ ai Hulden Beach may be part of a three-mile section of the road scheduled to be repaired and resurfaced this fall. ford to repair the entire six-mile stretch of Ocean Boulevard in one year. Whatever is not completed next fiscal year will be finished in fiscal year 1991-92. He said the town board will be permitted to suggest which section of the boulevard it would like to see completed first. Commissioners in dicated last week that a top priority will probably be the well-traveled stretch between the bridge and Holden Beach Fishing Pier. The DOT hopes to accept bids and award a contract for the im provements shortly after funds be come available July 1 so work can begin this fall. Bowers said a simi lar resurfacing project is planned for Beach Drive al Long Beach. Cook estimated it will cost S50.000 per mile to repair and resurface Ocean Boulevard. The money will come out of the state's urban resurfacing fund. While resurfacing of the boule vard is assured, DOT officials were less optimistic about the chances of widening the street to accommodate bicycles, joggers and pedestrians. Commissioner Amos, who had suggested the widening and the meeting with DOT officials at the town board's last regular session, said adding one or two feet on each side of the street would help. "We're getting a lot more traffic than we were getting in the old days." Though the state officials promised to look into widening the street. Bowers said the project would be very expensive. All con crete driveways that extend to the edge of the existing road would have to be cut and later repaired if the boulevard was widened. While he admitted there is little money available. Bowers suggested the town seek funds for a bike path or walkway through the DOT's bi cycle program. Holdcn Beach ap plied for bike path money several years ago, but didn't receive any. In other business relating to transportation last week, Cook said the DOT plans to correct drainage problems along the boulevard at Neptune Drive and Blockade Runner. Also, the town manager reported thai a Hashing yellow and red traffic signal will be installed on the island at the foot of the bridge as soon as a suitable location is found for a pole. Holden Board Denies Bathhouse Variance BY DOUG RUTTER A Holden Beach campground manager said he will set up rest room facilities in an existing build ing after being a variance Monday that would have allowed construction of a new bathhouse in violation of flood elevation code. The Holden Reach Zoning Board of Adjustment voted 3-2 Monday to grant a variance requested by the manager of Holden Beach Family Campground. He wanted to rebuild the bathhouse destroyed in Hurri cane Hugo without meeting eleva tion requirements. However, since a four-fifths majority is needed to giant a variance, the request was de nied. The fear that Holden Beach's participation in the National Flood Insurance Program could be jeopar dized by granting the variance prov ed to be the main reason for denial. Campground manager Gil Bass had asked for the variance from lo cal flood elevation rules, which are identical to federal regulations. The code would have required that the bathhouse be raised about nine feet off the ground on pilings. Bass wanted to build the structure two or three feet above ground level to provide easier access for elderly and handicapped campers. Board of adjustment members Allan Dameron, Graham King and Martin Feldt voted in favor of granting the variance, while Geor gia Langley and Alfred Bell op posed it Immediately after the vote, Bass announced that he intended to build bathhouse facilities ? commodes, sinks and showers ? inside an exist ing, ground-level building next to the campground on Ocean Boule vaxu West. The facilities wiii be set up inside the Huluen Beach Fishing "If something happened in the flood insurance program , I do not want to be held responsible ? Georgia Langley, member Hoiden Beach Board of Adjustment Pier building, which Bass also man ages, or a smaller structure east of the pier shop. About 20 Holden Beach resi dents, including three town com missioners, turned out for Monday's 45-minute variance hearing at town haii. The hearing had been postponed two weeks earlier when it was dis covered that granting a variance might affect the status of the federal flood insurance program at Holden Beach. Bass had requested the delay due to conflicting statements from fed eral flood insurance officials regard ing what effect the variance could have at Holden Beach. He pointed out Monday. "Dealing with the fed eral government, you still don't have an exact answer." Throughout this week's meeting, however, board members referred to a five-page document from the Fed eral Emergency Management Agen cy (FEMA) on guidelines for local variances. After a lengthy discussion and a few minutes of silence Monday, Dameron made the motion to grant the variance, which would have al lowed Bass to build a bathhouse four feet above the ground. Dameron based his position on a Jan. 19 leuer from C. Richard May son, chief of the natural hazards branch with hhMA. Ihe letter stat ed in part that "patterns of variances and communities that issue 2 large number of variances could be sub ject to enforcement action ..." Building Inspector Dwight Car roll testified at the hearing that he is aware of only two variances the town has granted in recent years and that FEMA officials never ob jected IU UiClll. Said Dameron, "If the only thing we're going to do is quote (the rules) verbatim, there's no need for this board." King supported Dameron 's posi tion, staling that the purpose of the board of adjustment is to provide relief to property owners in cases of hardship. He pointed out that the town had received no firm response from FEMA whether the variance in question would affect the flood in surance program at Holden Beach. Also basing her opinion on the contents of the FEMA letter, Mrs. Langley was the most vocal oppo nent of granting the variance. She argued that the town had re ceived nothing in writing stating that the flood insurance program on the island would not be affected by a variance. "If something happened in the flood insurance program, I do not want to be held responsible," CLASSIFIEDS Good News reopie Can Use she continued. The FEMA letter indicated that, generally speaking, most situations do not warrant a variance. The key element that is often overlooked, it continued, is that variances should be given as a result of problems w ith the luiid and not fm uum ic*t sons. Carroll said the variance, com bined with other variances or flood code violations at Holden Beach, could possibly affect flood insur ance program on the island. He not ed, however, that FEMA has never canceled flood insurance in a beach community. Mrs. Langiey commented, 'i don't want to test the federal gov ernment" Asked what he thought would happen if a variance was granted, Carroll replied, "I don't think the sky's going to fall down. I don't think the moon's going to turn blue." At the start of the hearing, Bass explained that he had requested the variance to provide easier access for campers. He said about 25 percent of them are retirees and senior citi zens, some of whom use canes or walkers. Sweet Deals On Wheels Lifesaver XLM ? 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LeGwin Williams of Village Mart on Village Point Road near Bay Road told sheriff's deputies that the larceny occurred Sunday between 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Williams said a United Carolina Bank bag containing cash, chccks, a Master Card slip and two bank books apparently was removed from under the store counter when he was briefly called away from the front of the business by a customer. Break-Ins Reported The sheriff's department Monday was investigating several break-ins reported over the weekend. Ingcmar Johannson ! lank ins of Route 2, Bolivia, told authorities that his mobile home on Randolph ville Road just off U.S. 17 was en tered between 7 p.m. Friday and 8:15 a.m. Saturday. The intruder pried open a back door. Stolen were a Colortyme console vidcocasscttc recorder. Pioneer stereo, Sanyo compact disc player. Whirlpool microwave oven, Zenith 19-inch color television, Fender am plifier, two Fisher stereo speakers, AT&T cordless telephone, two 30.06-caliber rifles, .38-caIiber re volver and a South Brunswick High School class ring. The property was worth 55,130. In another break-in, Johnny Matthews of Fairmont reported that someone entered his mobile home in Styron's Landing subdivision off CRIME REPORT Seashore Road by prying open a front door. The break-in happened between Jan. 6 and 1:30 p.m. Sun day. Missing items included a General Electric 19-inch color television and Hotpoint microwave oven. Theft less was listed at $740. Also, dam ages were estimated at SI 90. Jack Aubry Tucker of Racford told officers that the storage shed of his vacation home in Seaside Hideaway Estates was broken into between Nov. 19, 1989, and noon Sunday. A lock was pried off the shed door. Fishing equipment worth S355 was taken. Jimmy Helms of Ashcboro re ported a break-in at his summer house in the Brown's Landing area near Holden Beach. The brcak-in, which was discovered Friday even ing, happened within the previous two weeks. An intruder pried open the back door of the house and removed an Agfa camera and a sword; the items were worth S150. Approximately $100 in damage also was done to an antique desk. Car Stolen The sheriff's department Monday njso was on the lookout for 2 cur that was stolen Saturday from a Le land area residence. Connie Sue Owens of Route 1, Lcland, said her 1984 Chevrolet Cavalier was taken from where it was parked in her yard between 10 p.m. Friday and 8:30 a.m. Saturday. The car was worth $4,000. ' SOS ' Group To Discuss Sludge A.R. Rubin, a bio- and agri-cngi nccring specialist at N.C. State Uni versity, will be the guest speaker at the February meeting of the "Save Our Shellfish" organization. The meeting is set for Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the Lock wood Folly Com munity Building. According to Brunswick County Agricultural Extension Chairman Milton Coleman, Rubin will present a program on the permitting process and land application techniques for mnnir in-il sludge on ggnnnhurol lands. Rubin also will discuss re ceiver sites ? areas where untreated septage from home septic tanks is disposed. Those issues arc of interest to SOS due to the organization's ef forts to identify sources of pollution on the Lockwood Folly River. State environmental agencies have said the river's pollution problems arc Gray Cockatiel' 'with yellow cheeks flew the coop Saturday from. Varnamtown. He was last seen m Maple Creek area* y. He can say a few words and ' does several wtvstles. He also calls the cat. If you see or hear him, please call Tammie, 754-6890 or 842-9231. Thanks and keep your eye in the sky! AAA*** * causcd, in genera!, by stormwaicr runoff and septic tank effluent For more information on Friday's meeting, contact SOS President Annie Smigicl at 842-6758. 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