ROANOKE TIMES

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

DATE: TUESDAY, June 14, 1994                   TAG: 9406170175
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: C-1   EDITION: NEW RIVER VALLEY 
SOURCE: BRIAN KELLEY STAFF WRITER
DATELINE: CHRISTIANSBURG                                 LENGTH: Medium


MONTGOMERY BOARD REJECTS TRAILER PARK PROPOSAL

Two dozen Elliston residents greeted the defeat of a proposed trailer park with a round of applause Monday night for the Montgomery County Board of Supervisors.

By a 5-2 vote, the board rejected Frank and Joyce Howard's second application to build a 73-lot trailer park off Cove Hollow Road and U.S. 460/11.

Earlier, the Board of Supervisors narrowly rezoned 96 acres just outside Christiansburg in the first phase of the Heritage Place subdivision, which could become one of Montgomery County's largest developments during the next decade.

The supervisors also reappointed Bob Goncz, 48, to the county School Board to represent District B and appointed newcomer Peggy Arrington, 42, to the District G post to replace Don Lacy. Both appointments will be for 18 months leading up to the first School Board elections.

The supervisors chose Goncz, the School Board's current vice chairman, over four other candidates and Arrington over one other, Wat Hopkins.

The trailer park vote ended the tension for dozens of Elliston residents who have crowded county meetings and circulated petitions both this spring and last fall, when the Howards withdrew an earlier, denser version of the plan in the face of certain defeat by the supervisors.

Opponents cited the area's rural character, the danger to children from an adjacent Norfolk Southern Corp. rail line and the impact of the park on already overcrowded schools.

Allen Howard, speaking for his parents, noted that a recent facilities study received by the county School Board showed the area around Elliston-Shawsville will need new schools whether the trailer park is built or not.

After the vote, Howard said the family will start looking at other development options, including single-family homes, for their 18 acres.

The sole votes in favor of the park came from Supervisors Ira Long of Prices Fork and Joe Stewart, who represents the Elliston and Shawsville region. Opponents interrupted Stewart as he tried to read a statement disputing some of their assertions.

The 4-3 vote to approve the Heritage Place subdivision rezoning came amid one of the Board of Supervisors' first discussions about the need to strengthen the subdivision ordinance to require that new developments be hooked up to public water and sewer systems.

Supervisors Henry Jablonski, Jim Moore and Joe Gorman argued for such a move to prevent homeowners from having to shoulder the costs of connecting years later because of septic system failures.

Heritage Place, planned for 231 lots when fully developed, will rely on septic systems for the first phases because the developer believes connecting to Christiansburg's sewer system would cost nearly $2 million. David Harman, the developer, does plan to extend public water service from the town.

Chairman Larry Linkous cast the deciding vote in the rezoning, and was joined by Nick Rush, Jablonski and Stewart.

The county Planning Commission has been studying the issue of mandatory hookups, but Monday night was the first time the Board of Supervisors had spent any significant amount of time on the issue.



 by CNB