Facing growing and vocal
opposition to a proposal to have a 56.9 acre
parcel at the far end of District 2 Road rezoned
to allow consideration of a conditional use
permit to establish a gravel pit, applicant
Kevin McNally is concerned that terminology
might be getting in the of what he sees as an
eminently sensible idea.
“I have property on the
Kootenai
River right where the river
restoration project is going to happen,” he
said. “The structures needed to place the
structures in the river are too big to negotiate
my 10-foot road, and there is no other access to
the site, so the road must be widened to
accommodate them. That’s going to take one,
maybe two blasts.”
That’s where terminology
comes in. To make the road, he has to move some
rock. If he keeps it or gives it away, he
wouldn’t need a county permit. Thanks to a
natural disaster in 1997 when the side of the
hill at the foot of District 2, he already has a
state permit and reclamation plan.
But to sell it to the tribe
to use in the restoration project, he needs a
county permit. Current
Boundary County
Zoning and Subdivision Ordinances didn’t even
mention gravel pits until a recent Idaho Supreme
Court Ruling ruled that the lack of mention
means “gravel pits,” can’t be considered in
Boundary
County. Knowing that the county
needs rock, gravel, sand and other mineral
resources, County
Commissioners recently adopted an
ordinance amendment that allows “gravel pits” to
be considered as a conditional use in the
Agriculture/Forestry zone districts.
Problem is, the nearly
60-acre parcel McNally needs to move the rock
from is zoned rural residential, the result, he
said, of an old zoning mistake.
In a letter submitted for
inclusion in the application today, Kevin wrote,
“My dad passed in 1965, leaving my mom with six
kids. I am the eldest son and I have lived on
the ranch for about 34 years. We allow anyone
who asks to fish and hunt that access, and
usually eight to 12 white tail deer and a dozen
or so turkeys are taken from our place yearly.”
While the people on “the
rim,” who have built some beautiful homes in the
French Point Subdivision overlooking the
Kootenai
River Valley
have been vocal in their opposition to his
current proposal, he says that those very homes
are an eyesore to him, and the noise of
construction a nuisance. He accepts his share of
the blame, however … French Point subdivision
was once part of the land holdings he now
oversees.
“Each of your homes on the
rim is an eyesore to me,” he wrote. “The noise
of the saws and the hammers pounding during
building season for years, but it is partially
my fault because after I showed people who
wanted to be developers how to do it with French
Point, everyone got in the act and now I have to
look at the houses on the rim. Progress.
The current zoning of the
road widening project area is rural
residential,” he wrote. “This was caused by a
clerical error by the county mapper at that time
I had the zoning changed for French Point.”
Instead of following the
railroad right of way, as he intended, he wrote,
the lines were drawn to encompass a single
56-acre piece of land south of the tracks, all
the way down to the river, land he says is
clearly not suitable for high density
residential use. Under the current zoning, he
said, he could build 56 homes. There aren’t the
roads or infrastructure to make that a viable
proposition, he said, and the homes in French
Point and along the rim are enough to convince
him that he’d hate to see such development.
“I am retired and do not
want or need a new job,” he wrote. “I want to
build four or frive cabins around my place for
birders, fishermen or hunters to use. I want to
keep it much as I have for the last 34 years.
Believe me, I have had more engineers and
interested parties in the last year than Carter
has little pill … in the years that we’ve owned
it, we have selectively logged, rented pasture
for cattle and developed the part on the rim to
provide support for my mother and pay the taxes.
After the river project is done and the pit put
to bed, I, for one, will just enjoy the quiet
and continue to be a good neighbor.”
Applications for gravel
pits are always hard, but this one is
complicated by several factors. The first issue
the Boundary County Planning and Zoning
Commission will have to consider following
public hearing March 17 is the zoning issue, and
this is an odd request. Most applicants ask for
higher density and a greater range of allowed
uses; this is the first in memory that seeks
less, from a single family home per acre to a
single family home per ten acres.
This is also the first time
a seldom used provision of county ordinances
have been invoked to allow consideration of two
applications at once. If the Planning and Zoning
Commission agrees that these 56 acres better fit
the Ag/Forestry than the rural residential, they
will forward a recommendation to county
commissioners to affect the change … if they
don’t, the conditional use permit application
becomes moot.
If they agree to the zone
change, they will forward that recommendation to
the board of county commissioners, and then they
can consider they conditional use permit
application, on which the P&Z commission has
approval authority … but in this case, approval
is not valid until county commissioners approve
the zone change, which will require a second
public hearing.
And what really throws a
wrench in the works is that Kevin already has an
approved Idaho Department of Lands permit,
complete with reclamation plan, issued under
disaster provisions when the North Hill gave way
October 16, 2008, wiping
out highway and rail.
According to Kevin, he
supplied over 35,000 cubic feet of rock in the
weeks following to replace the railroad bed rock
that was washed away. And it came from the very
place the Union Pacific is concerned about now.
“When the big slide
happened, the county came to my place and opened
up a rock pit to replace the railroad bedrock,”
he said, “and left me with shot rock which I
have been selling a little at a time since.”
McNally says that the
actual “pit” size is less than two acres, and
that engineers he’s hired to examine the site
have assured him that the blasts needed to widen
the road will be low-charge and number no more
than two.
“My contractors know what
they’re doing,” he said. “There might be a ‘pop’
or two, but unless you’re standing on top of it,
you’re not going to feel it. As remote as it is,
the people who live on the rim might hear
‘poof.”
The river restoration
project, he said is going to require some rock
and if they can’t get it from him, they’re going
to have to get it there on a private road across
his land. Which needs a bit of widening.
“People hear ‘gravel pit,’
and they think of a hole in the ground and dust
and noise,” he said. “This will be no hole in
the ground. Instead of trucks coming in from
miles away, traveling up and down the road, this
permit will allow me to do the job I need to get
done and sell the rock that’s going to be needed
for a project that is going to happen from a few
feet away rather than miles away. I don’t want
to make a living off this, I’ve done that. I
just think my proposal makes good common sense,
and I’m worried by the comments I’ve heard. It’s
not a gravel pit, it’s not going to be here
forever. All I’m asking is to be able to sell
the rock rather than give it away.”
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