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Causes that CNCN is working with or has
worked on previously:
Building stronger communities: Community Overlay for
East Lakes' 33,000 residents. Join CNCN to
help develop a community overlay to help define what the
East Lake area is. According to Pinellas county:
The COMMUNITY OVERLAY PLANNING PROCESS is
intended to:
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Geographically define a specific
unincorporated community in the Pinellas County
Comprehensive Plan (and on the Future Land Use Map).
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Provide an area of focus for a
community-based vision and goals.
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Provide for an inclusive planning process
that enables community stakeholders to work together on
identifying, protecting or enhancing, special features,
characteristics, and attributes that are unique to the
community or important to its residents.
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Allow for change and improvement that
further a community’s vision and goals.
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Represent, upon its inclusion in the
Comprehensive Plan, the Board’s policy with regard to
decisions and commitments that will have both short and
long term effects on the community.
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Ultimately, provide for the incorporation
of community-based policies into the overall long-range
comprehensive planning program of the County so that
County decisionmaking better recognizes and considers
local community desires and local characteristics.
Annexation of East Lake Woodlands proposal by City of
Oldsmar
Recently the Council of
North County Neighborhoods, Inc. (CNCN) Board of Directors
has become engaged in the current annexation opportunity
presented by the City of Oldsmar in their effort to annex
the East Lake Woodlands subdivision and surrounding
commercial properties. As we represent neighborhoods in the
northern Pinellas County unincorporated areas of East Lake
and Palm Harbor we are very concerned with the issues of
annexation. Our area consisting of mainly the East Lake and
Palm Harbor Fire Districts, representing 96,000 residents,
is in jeopardy of being shrunk by significant size if the
Oldsmar annexation and the inevitable upcoming surge by
Tarpon Springs to annex some of the northern neighborhoods
occurs. This represents a concern over our area’s
significant donor status to the tax rolls of Pinellas County
and quality of life issues that will be affected by a
reduction in our unincorporated population by annexation.
CNCN has met with ELWCA,
City of Oldsmar, East Lake Fire Commission and County
Commissioners and is attempting to aggregate information and
provide a conduit for discussions on this important issue.
Some of the available options include: becoming part of
Oldsmar, staying an unincorporated area with better
representation, and possibly looking at the Tierra Verde
proposed model of “light” incorporation to prevent small
annexation efforts. Our Board of Directors would like to
request that we are provided a voice in these upcoming
discussions of annexation-free zones through formal
representation or alternatively representation by the BCC in
our interest.
Crescent Oaks
issues
Jim McDonald and John Miolla the founding Charter Members of
CNCN have worked for years, along with many Crescent Oaks
residents, with the County government on several Crescent
Oaks and County related issues with good success.
Our group worked on and got the speed limited reduced on
East Lake Road north of Keystone Road from 55MPH to 50MPH.
Crescent Oaks HOA Board and residents worked successfully to
gain approval to have a traffic signal placed at the
intersection of East Lake and Crescent Oaks Blvd alleviating
treacherous circumstances relating to ingress and egress to
East Lake Road to/from those communities
Trinity Blending Facility construction
When the surprise blending facility in the Brooker Creek
Preserve off of Trinity Blvd was announced, once again
Crescent Oaks residents rallied to argue that no public
hearings were held; there was no land use change for this
facility and the layout and height of water towers went
against the County’s own ordinances on land use. The plan
would potentially destroy hundreds of acres of the
Preserve. The blending facility was put on hold and now has
been reconfigured and meets County code. It will be built to
withstand a Category 5 hurricane and act as a staging area
for First Responders after the storm.
East Lake Active
Recreation facilities for youth sports:
CNCN has been following this issue for the
past year and a half through the various proposals from the
county. We’ve compiled a study of the need for active
recreation facilities in northern Pinellas County which is
now published on our website. We tried to examine all
aspects of the issue and the level of services provided for
the 33,000 residents of the un-incorporated area in the East
Lake corridor relative to the rest of the county. CNCN publishes
"Study for Active Recreation Facilities in East Lake"
paper to help everyone understand what's happening.
The ELYSA ball fields were slated to be expanded into 38
additional acres within the Brooker Creek Preserve. This
plan was challenged by many groups, including Crescent Oaks.
One Commissioner commented that it was just a small group of
people that were fighting this plan. Hence; the idea to
form CNCN and to combine all the individual voices into a
much larger voice. With a larger voice political pressure
was applied to find a suitable solution. It was announced on
June 19, 2007 that the School Board and The County had
gotten together and worked out a plan to locate the fields
on School Board Property at the corner of East Lake Road and
Keystone Roads meeting the County obligation for fields for ELYSA.
Tarpon Woods
Flooding:
CNCN is currently working with Tarpon Woods Action
Committee. By joining forces, we have substantially increase
the total number of residents applying pressure to local
government
to adequately and thoroughly investigate all options to
solve the flooding issue while
maintaining the existence of the Tarpon Woods Golf Course.
CNCN has attended and helped facilitate meetings with
Senator Fasano, Representative Nehr and Commissioner Susan
Latvala on this issue. Representatives from CNCN are on the
newly formed Tarpon Woods Action Committee.
The real impetuous and the sheer numbers of people that
began showing up at Board Of County Commissioners meetings,
work sessions, and Public Hearings clearly demonstrated the
interest our neighbors had in what County government is or
isn’t doing fostering the County to begin listening to these
large groups of people on various issues. It’s all in the
numbers; when fifty or a hundred people show up the
Commission needs to listen. If you really want to get their
attention as Crescent Oaks did, show up in bus loads of
residents.
Commissioner Duncan commented to CNCN that the "Council of
North County Neighborhoods is a novel organization – one
which is new, “coming afresh”, and one which is welcomed as
a breath of fresh air."
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