Legislator Says Currituck Span Would Survive Cuts

 

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Rendering of the mid-Currituck bridge. (N.C. Turnpike Authority)

Coastal Review Online | April 25, 2013

Legislator Says Currituck Span Would Survive Cuts

By Catherine Kozak
Coastal Review Online

A bill that would change funding for the planned Mid-Currituck Bridge and Cape Fear Skyway may be giving proponents the jitters, but even if it passes, the projects are not necessarily doomed.

An amendment to House Bill 10 would lift dedicated “gap” funds and place the bridges in the funding mix to compete with other projects.

State Rep. Bob Steinburg, R-Chowan, said he is confident the 7-mile bridge between the Currituck mainland and Corolla will survive the legislative churn.

“The project wouldn’t be dead,” Steinburg said.

To nab construction dollars, the bridge would have to rank high among top-priority projects under the state’s Transportation Improvement Program. It would, however, be prioritized according to a list of criteria that include job creation and health and safety concerns.

Steinburg said that has had assurances by Tony Tata, the state Secretary of Transportation, on the fate of the bridge.

“It is my understanding that regardless of what happens to this House bill, this project would still rank very high,” he said. “Secretary Tata told me that the bridge will be built. He didn’t say when it would be built, but he said it will be built.”

But Steinburg conceded that if costs for the bridge are revised upward, the state Department of Transportation may not look as kindly on the Currituck span.

In the works for nearly 30 years, the $660 million project would trim an hour off the drive from Virginia to Corolla and address traffic congestion that routinely clogs the roads leading to the northern Outer Banks.

Even local residents who live off back roads winding through residential neighborhoods can’t escape the weekend traffic because GPS-enabled maps direct tourists to the alternate routes.

Peter Bishop, director of economic development for Currituck County, said that traffic has become the No. 1 complaint with visitors to the Outer Banks. On a summer weekend, what should be a 1.5-hour trip from Moyock can turn into four or more hours. When Hurricanes Irene and Sandy closed N.C. 12 to Hatteras, he said, the traffic got heavier when Hatteras vacationers were diverted to the north.

And with the beaches in New York and New Jersey still damaged from Sandy, Bishop said he expects that Corolla will have more visitors this summer.

But there is growing concern that traffic congestion, already a challenge in hurricane evacuation, will make tourists go somewhere else.

“You can see how that mentally kind of builds up,” Bishop said, referring to someone crawling for hours in traffic. “They think, ‘OK, I can get to the beach four hours earlier.’ ”

Traffic counts are important in determining how the bridge ranks with competing road projects. Congestion counts for 20 percent of a project’s score. The higher the traffic count, the higher the project scores. Improving road safety counts another 10 percent. The state looks at crash rates on the highway. Road conditions, time savings for drivers, and economic benefits to the region are factored as well.

Considering the value of tourism to the Outer Banks and the state, he said, the Mid-Currituck Bridge is an economic and safety necessity. It would speed up hurricane evacuation times, increase employment opportunities on both sides of the bridge, decrease commuting time for seasonal workers, and vastly improve the travel experience for tourists.

Tourism revenue in North Carolina in 2011 exceeded $18.4 billion, providing about 188,000 jobs and $4.18 billion in wages, according to the state Commerce Department.

On the barrier islands in Currituck, Dare and Hyde counties, tourism accounts for 5.6 percent of the state’s entire tourism economy. With annual visitation of about 8 million, the Outer Banks represents $1.03 billion in visitor spending, 13,200 jobs, $203.7 million in local payrolls and about $1 billion in tax revenue for local communities.

Steinburg said that the Mid-Currituck Bridge would also play an important role in creating a new economic engine he is proposing for the northeast corner of the state, which has lost many jobs in regional industries such as manufacturing, fishing, lumber and agriculture.

A bill Steinburg has recently introduced would use the Port of Norfolk to foster enterprises in counties located within 1 ½-hours from the port that could be become part of the foreign trade market. He said the initiative could open up the region to economic development, and the bridge is an essential component.

“I am very excited about the potential we have in northeastern North Carolina,” he said.

On March 6, state Sen. Bill Rabon, R-Brunswick, sponsored an amendment to House Bill 10 that would remove the designated funds for the three proposed toll projects, including the Garden Parkway near Charlotte, and make them compete with other transportation projects. Rabon said that the amendment, which has been approved by the Senate Transportation Committee and the Senate, would prevent politics from influencing road projects.

The amended House bill passed the Senate but has yet to be taken up by the House.

Being a Republican, Steinburg is well aware of the bitterness some members of his party have toward the region and projects like the Mid-Currituck Bridge.

“I believe this is a backlash,” he said. “They’re going after this bridge because of some animus they still have for Sen. Basnight. People see this as his project.”

But Steinburg said that the bridge stands on its own merits, regardless of political perceptions.

“It’s nothing but personal,” he said about the Republicans’ distaste for Basnight, a Manteo Democrat and longtime Senate president before his retirement in 2011. “There’s a great deal of resentment of some of the stuff he pulled. That’s why, sadly, Currituck is paying the cost today.”

Whatever the outcome of the Rabon bill, said Nicole Meister, a DOT spokesperson, the projects would not be slated for elimination as some fear. Like any other transportation project, they would be ranked in priority on five-year and 10-year state transportation plans for each of the state divisions.

And even if a project does not rank high, she said, it would go back into the priority process for future consideration.

“The reason why we support this is we want to take politics out of transportation planning,” Meister said. “It doesn’t mean that they’re not going to be built, or they’re going to be built.”

Meister said that the proposed bill does not remove the possibility of tolling. But instead of being the main approach to funding the projects, tolling would one of the options considered in funding.

“It gives it more flexibility,” she said.

This story is provided courtesy of Coastal Review Online, the coastal news and features service of the N.C. Coastal Federation. The Outer Banks Voice is partnering with Coastal Review Online to provide readers with more stories of interest in our area. You can read other stories about the N.C. coast at www.nccoast.org.

2013 Golf Panel Ranks Three OBX Courses in Top 100

North Carolina’s Outer Banks-area golf courses earn honors in rankings

OUTER BANKS, N.C. — The famed Outer Banks of North Carolina has further cemented its status as a bourgeoning golf destination, with a popular trio of area courses cracking the North Carolina Golf Panel’s Top 100 Courses rankings for the first time ever.

On the heels of Kilmarlic Golf Club earning a No. 14 spot among Golfweek’s 2013 “Best Courses You Can Play” in North Carolina, Kilmarlic now joins Currituck Club and Nags Head Golf Links in the 2013 Golf Panel rankings of the finest courses in one of the country’s best golf states.

“Having three ranked golf courses on the Outer Banks definitely puts us on the map as a golf destination,” said Ben Bridgers, general manager of Nags Head Golf Links and OBX Golf Association member. “It’s a great honor for Nags Head to be in the Top 100, especially after having to recover from Hurricane Irene. We feel like the club is a hidden gem as a great test of golf located in a beautiful place.”

The Top 100 courses are determined by a scoring system where panelists are asked to consider among these factors: conditioning, routing, design, strategy, memorability, fairness, variety and aesthetics. The panel’s rankings are published annually in the April issue of Business North Carolina magazine, and are detailed on the panel’s Web site (www.NCGolfPanel.com).

The No. 71 Currituck Club, routed by world-renowned architect Rees Jones, rolls across diverse coastal terrain with sound-side views distinctly its own on the northern end of the barrier island. The grandest design along the coast is also the area’s most demanding, especially when the wind kicks up.

Located on the mainland and five minutes from the Wright Brothers Bridge, No. 84 Kilmarlic is a popular Tom Steele design nestled along the marshland of the Albemarle Sound and host course for both the 2004 and 2009 North Carolina Opens. For the past three years during the autumn months, Kilmarlic also hosted the Old Dominion/Outer Banks collegiate championship.

No. 98 Nags Head, crafted by Bob Moore, plays hard along the inner waterway on the southern end. The front and back nine closing holes along the sound are particularly spectacular. Nags Head’s bar and restaurant, not surprisingly, is also home to the most dramatic sunsets in town, with views not only across the immediate Roanoke Sound, but towards three other sounds (Albemarle, Croatan and Pamlico) that flow into it from the north, west and south as well.

The OBX golf experience is enhanced by two other courses on the mainland but certainly worth leaving the island to go play. The Pointe Golf Club and The Carolina Club are a pair of the most immaculately manicured and impeccably conditioned golf courses around. After all, the sister layouts are owned and operated by a man who also runs one of the region’s major turf grass companies, and both courses were built on what had previously been fertile farm land.

Learn more about these courses and the OBX golf experience at www.PlayOBXGolf.com or 800-916-6244.

~Article courtesy of WorldGolf.com.

Currituck County Continues to Deny Off-Road Development Plans

After reporting previous attempts of developer Gerald Friedman requests for rezoning that would have allowed a hotel and shopping to be placed in the 4 X 4 area of Swan Beach, Currituck County continues to oppose the project.

More than 100 people showed up at Monday’s meeting to show disapproval of the project.

If one property was granted commercial status others would follow, said Vance Aydlett, chairman of the Currituck County Board of Commissioners. The vote was unanimous. County planning staff and the planning board also had recommended denial.

“Once you open that Pandora’s box, it’s over with,” Aydlett said Tuesday.

The county’s land-use plan calls for limited development in the four-wheel-drive area, north of Corolla. No roads are paved. Friedman continues to claim that the tract in Swan Beach was set aside for commercial use and signed by the chairman of the county Board of Commissioners on September 2nd, 1969.

He also claims his project is no more intrusive than a 23-bedroom house used for weddings and various home businesses operating in Swan Beach and Carova.

Home businesses are allowed under certain restrictions, Aydlett said. In response, county inspectors found nine home businesses not in compliance. Most are making changes to comply with the county ordinance, but at least two have not responded, said Ben Woody, director of the Currituck County Planning Department.

Looks like Currituck stands firm in keeping these sections of the Outer Banks free from commercial businesses and maintaining the habitat of over 100 wild horses.

New Theme Parks in the Corolla?

Outer Banks - Whalehead Club

Outer Banks - Whalehead Club

The Outer Banks has always been known for its resistance to a true tourist destination, opposing anything similar to a Myrtle Beach feel. Nothing against Myrtle, but the OBX has always made it a priority to be a relaxing destination where everyone feels like a local and is here to appreciate the beach and other natural elements of the area.

The Virginia Pilot is reporting that Corolla residents recently opposed two proposed new fun parks and expansion at the Whalehead Club in Corolla, NC, including two new miniature golf courses and two amphitheaters directly across from each other.

Developer Rick Willis seeks a permit to build an amphitheater, a miniature golf course, a zip line and retail shops on 6.9 acres next to N.C. 12 across from the Whalehead Club.

For the second month in a row the county planning board has tabled its recommendation for the park , following new scaled down plans from developers.

In a separate fun park project, Israel Golasa of G. Holdings proposes to build a miniature golf course and a bumper car ride on two acres adjacent to TimBuck II shopping area.

This is another scaled-down version of an earlier 3.3-acre project proposed in 2009 that would have also included a go-cart track and an arcade. Previous proposals have been opposed by local residents.

Meanwhile, the historic Whalehead Club has asked the county for permits and funding to expand activities there over the next 10 to 15 years, including projects such as reconstructing a caretaker’s house that once sat on the property, a vendors area and an amphitheater on an open field currently being used as a wastewater spray field that would have to be relocated.

The citizens group opposing these developments sees them as out of character for the area. Noting they would create noisy distractions for residents and visitors.

“We’ve got two amphitheaters looking at each other,” said Bob Schultz, a board member with the Corolla Civic Association. “For some reason all these developers think people are looking for the Myrtle Beach atmosphere. That’s not why they come to Corolla.”

But the developers disagree.

“These residents reflect a small percentage of people who own property on the Currituck Outer Banks,” one said, adding that these attractions will add value for owners who chose to rent their homes for the season.

Corolla residents have often opposed new commercial developments over the years. Citizen committees influencing county laws have led to limitations on signs, lighting, noise and gaudy appearances seen at other resorts.

As for the Whalehead Club, which is owned and financed by the county and draws about 17,000 visitors a year, the hope is the proposed additions will bring more locals and visitors to the area and proposed the new caretaker’s house would be used for weddings, classrooms and meeting space.

The Board of Commissioners will have to approve all three projects, but what do you think?

Proposed Outer Banks Bridge on Shaky Ground?

Mid-Currituck Bridge

Mid-Currituck Bridge

The Virginia Pilot recently ran an article about the potential problems facing final approval for the proposed mid-Currituck Bridge.

The scope of the US political spectrum shifted a bit with the recent elections in November, and the Republican lawmakers who clawed their way back into the NC General Assembly last month are looking for much needed budget cuts.  Seems the mid-Currituck Bridge could be on the chopping block.

The debates surrounding the bridge have echoed for years.   There are concerns.  Environmental, zoning, construction, etc.  But the debates on these issue have already been voiced and heard, and the major project still seemed poised for approval.

The proposed bridge would begin near Aydlett, about 25 miles south of the Virginia-North Carolina line, and stretch across the Sound to Corolla.  It is believed that the bridge would cut travel time for visitors headed to northern Outer Banks.

At this point, the closest access to the Outer Banks is the Wright Memorial Bridge, about 20 miles south of Aydlett.  As a result, travelers headed to the northern end of the Outer Banks are forced to head 20 miles south to Kitty Hawk, and spin around onto Rt. 12 to head north another 10 – 20 miles to reach Duck and Corolla.  Clearly not ideal.  The convoluted route has long been a source of safety concerns. A new bridge is expected to reduce evacuation times, boost tourism on both sides of the sound and curb pollution from idling vehicles.

Earlier this year it seemed a final conclusion in favor of the bridge was coming to a close.

Not so fast.

The NC state lawmakers need to close a projected $3 – 4 billion (yes, with a B!) deficit, and the bridge offers a pretty significant savings.  The current plans for the bridge call for initial funding at $15 million per year, but that figure has the potential to rise to $28 million per year in 2013…and continue for 40 years.

Seems like the debate is far from over but conclusions could be reached in the near future.

New Development Laws for Currituck Outer Banks?

The Virginia Pilot recently announced that Currituck County’s development ordinance is undergoing a full rewrite, the first full rewrite in 21 years, and changes are expected.  The document is an assortment of laws that govern community planning.

The rewrite is quite an undertaking.  It was started at the end of 2009, and it’s expected to be completed by late summer 2011 with a cost of $223,711. 

Some of the proposed changes were released last week, including restricting the size of houses on the Currituck Outer Banks to 5,000 square feet, protect trees older than 50 years to preserve the rural character of the community and require developers to hold neighborhood meetings.

Public meetings on the proposed changes will be held Oct. 12 at the historic courthouse and Oct. 13 at the Corolla library. After getting public input, plans are to release draft versions during late winter, early spring of 2011.

Corolla Property Tax Values Expected to Decrease

The updated tax values of property in Corolla will not take place unitl 2013 for Currituck County, but the anticipation is that values will dramatically decrease.

County officials have been at work planning for the change in valuation.  Local experts believe that a tax burden could be passed to property owners on the mainland. There is no question that the downturn of the market since 2005 has caused property to be sold under the appraised value. Some local realtors report that some properties are being sold as much as 70 percent of its appraised value. As of right now, the Outer Banks pays about 58 percent of the property taxes in the county.

Could the tax burden shift soon?  If property valuations drop as they have been predicted to, county officials will be faced with a difficult decision about raising taxes to makeup for the shortfall.

Northern Outer Banks to Rewrite Planning & Zoning Laws

Clarion Associates, a consulting firm from Chapel Hill, NC  was recently hired to help Currituck County rewrite their planning and zoning rules; the county will rewrite thier entire Unified Developement Ordinance. 

The first two meetings were held last week, and they gave county residents a chance to weigh in on the issues.  About 30 residents stopped by the meeting.  Attendees were given a series of 35 questions.  The questions were split into two categories, Currituck Mainland and Currituck Outer Banks.

A representative from Clarion Associates commented, “We found it very helpful, especially when you’re getting results consistently, when 80 or 90 respondents favor one preference over another.”  The main objectives for the UDO rewrite, according to Clarion Associates, is to ensure the environment is protected, agriculture remains viable, and county residents’ quality of life isn’t negatively affected.  The updates are also designed to make the county’s planning codes more user friendly.

One of North Carolina’s Best Kept Secrets

obx-sunrise

Currituck County was established in 1688 among the original colonies, and was one of the first settled areas in the new world.  This county is one of the fastest growing counties in North Carolina.  Some attractions to this area are unspoiled beaches, a great collection of history, wild horses, great outdoor activities and gorgeous weather.   

Currituck is an area that has something for everyone, especially the nature lover, and it is just a short drive from the metropolitan Hampton Roads area.  

To learn more about this amazing vacation destination, feel free to visit www.visitcurrituck.com or call the Currituck County Tourism Board at 877-287-7488.

Mid-Currituck Bridge Project

A new bridge to the Outer Banks?!  For anyone who hasn’t heard, there is a possibility that a bridge connecting mainland Currituck to the beaches of Corolla could happen within the next four years.  There has been much deliberation about this subject among citizens of Currituck and Dare Counties over the past few years.

In February, citizens’ workshops took place and over 550 people attended.  Citizens were presented with multiple alternatives.  The primary goal of the alternatives would be to improve the existing roads in the area, with the possibility of building a new bridge that connects the mainland of Currituck County to the beaches of the Outer Banks, with various other improvements to the roads.

After the workshops, over 350 citizens commented on their thoughts about these alternatives.  The people who commented consisted of residents, property owners, employers, and local officials.  Most respondents expressed concerns with the need to reduce traffic congestion, and to improve the ability to evacuate in the event of emergencies, such as hurricanes.   Another concern expressed was the need to enhance access from our beaches to the mainland.  Many stated the fact that a new bridge would best address the traffic congestion problems.  Other respondents expressed concern about adverse affects the bridge may have on the area’s natural resources and pristine environment.

Since the workshops have taken place, The North Carolina Turnpike Authority has narrowed the alternatives to three.  These three alternatives include ER2, MCB2, and MCB4.  ER2 is an alternative that would not include a Mid Currituck Bridge but would include a 6-8 lane superstreet.  MCB2 would include a Mid Currituck Bridge and the 6-8 lane superstreet.  MCB4 would include the new bridge, but no superstreet.  The Turnpike Authority has also put together a timeline for this project.  The timeline is as follows:

  • Financial Feasibility Study- Completed
  • Draft Environmental Impact Statement- Early 2009
  • Final Environmental Impact Statement- Mid 2009
  • Record of Decision- Late 2009
  • Award Project Contract- Early 2010
  • Project Open To Traffic- 2013

If you would like further information and would like to keep track of the project’s progress, including the results of recent traffic and market surveys, please click here.