ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: FRIDAY, June 22, 1990                   TAG: 9006230355
SECTION: SMITH MOUNTAIN TIMES                    PAGE: SMT-4   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: 
DATELINE:                                 LENGTH: Medium


757 PROPERTY OWNERS REPLY TO SURVEY

The Smith Mountain Lake Association mailed surveys to about 7,000 property owners earlier this year.

Some 757 people responded. The respondants were composed of 43 percent full-time residents, 42 percent part-year residents and 15 percent occasional visitors or absent property owners.

Below are some of the issues raised:

Water safety

Boat operators should be licensed: 75 percent agreed; 25 percent disagreed.

Speed limits should be set for watercraft: 75 percent agreed; 25 percent disagreed.

Operators of jet skis should be subject to regulations beyond those for boaters: 82 percent agreed; 18 percent disagreed.

The association should seek legislation to control boat noise: 84 percent agreed; 16 percent disagreed.

Boating regulatons should become more strict during peak weekends between Memorial Day and Labor Day: 30 percent agreed; 70 percent disagreed.

Safe-boating courses should be taught in local high schools along with driver education courses: 67 percent agreed; 33 percent disagreed.

Government services

The lake area should combine to form an independent town, which would mean increased taxes: 26 percent agreed; 74 present disagreed.

The association should request that local sheriff's deputies patrol the lake: 72 percent agreed; 28 pecent disagreed.

The association should ask surrounding counties to hire crews to clean up the lake: 90 percent agreed; 10 percent disagreed.

The U.S. Coast Guard should return to the lake as an adjunct to the state game wardens: 70 percent agreed; 30 percent disagreed.

Smith Mountain Lake State Park should have more facilities: 73 percent agreed; 27 percent disagreed. (Suggested improvements: horses, cottages, expanded marina and ampitheatre.)

Quality of life

Billboards should be removed or restricted in the lake area: 93 percent agreed; 7 percent disagreed.

Off-property real-estate signs should be removed or restricted: 92 percent agreed; 8 percent disagreed.

The association should place recycling bins around the lake: 89 percent agreed; 11 percent disagreed.

Dredging should be used as a means of removing silt from Smith Mountain Lake: 80 percent agreed; 20 percent disagreed.

The association should be concerned with water and boating safety (19 percent agreed); zoning (16 percent); environmental issues (15 percent); docks (14 percent); roads (14 percent); wells (12 percent) and all of the above (9 percent).



 by CNB