TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (WCTV) – A determined group of Leon County residents and their county commissioner are asking to stop a map from urban planners that would add about 1,500 acres South of Tallahassee to something known as the “urban services area.”
According to Leon County Commissioner David O’Keefe, expanding the USA “opens the door” to new development near one of Leon County’s protected “canopy roads.” Plus, he said, expanding the map also gives developers a bonus to the number of homes they can build, if the final zoning allows it.
For residents of the Grassroots Community, development in the area would bring too much traffic to Old St. Augustine Road, which is protected as a canopy road.
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Plus, they worry the environment might be harmed by large-scale development. These changes are proposed as part of Leon County and the City of Tallahassee’s “Comprehensive Plan,” which is basically a land-use constitution.
Local urban planners say Tallahassee is in the midst of a once-in-thirty years change to the “comp plan,” which is supposed to manage long-term growth.
The newly proposed map has seen many changes, including a reversal vote where county commissioners changed their minds on expanding the services area near Lake Jackson. Residents are hoping for a similar thing in this case.
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