Board of Commissioners/Citizens TKO Planning Commission’s Port Tobacco ERRA
Last night at a public hearing, the Board of Commissioners voted 4 to 1 to reject the Planning Commission’s Port Tobacco Environmental Restoration & Recovery Area. Commissioner Reuben Collins cast the only dissenting vote.
WATCH an interview with Candice Quinn Kelly, President of the Board of Commissioners
WATCH an interview with Ken Robinson, Commissioner
WATCH an interview with Ken Hastings, Mason Springs Conservancy
READ an article about the vote at TheBayNet.com
LISTEN to the entire public hearing (1/31/12)
LISTEN to the BOC’s vote on the ERRA and reaction from the crowd
La Plata — Please attend a Jan. 31 Board of Commissioners public hearing at 6 p.m. regarding the Port Tobacco Environmental Restoration and Recovery Area (ERRA) — and ask the commissioners to reject this flawed zoning amendment.
A BIG THUMBS DOWN ON THE PLANNING COMMISSION’S ERRA FROM THE MARYLAND DEPT. OF PLANNING
WeMakeItNews.com has this and more in a new interview!
LISTEN to a 2 min. excerpt from our interview with Michael Paone, Senior Planner with MDP
LISTEN to the full interview (9 min. 45 sec.)
New 2 min. video explores the threat of a mega development zone for Port Tobacco
WATCH our new video about what’s at stake as Charles County’s Board of Commissioners get ready for a public hearing on the Planning Commission’s Port Tobacco Environmental Restoration and Recovery Area (ERRA).
La Plata — Please attend a Jan. 31 BOC public hearing at 6 p.m. regarding the Port Tobacco ERRA — and ask the commissioners to reject this flawed zoning amendment.
Your interest and voice can help save the Port Tobacco River, its nearly 28,000-acre watershed and our rural community.
Environmental Restoration and Recovery Area? This misnamed zone (an amendment to the 2006 comprehensive plan) will not fix our river. Instead, it could allow for up to nine times the density of what is currently legal in the county’s rural and agricultural zones.
To be clear, we want the issue of failing septic systems — and other environmental problems — to be addressed and corrected, but we do not believe this is the right way to affect change and solve this problem. We ask that county leaders explore a range of alternatives, funding and approaches to remedy the issue of bacteria leaching into the Port Tobacco River and not use this public-health problem as a reason to: 1. Prop up a questionable process and outcome; 2. Benefit a sole developer; and 3. Usher in unfettered growth in our watershed and forever change Port Tobacco’s unique and historic value.
WATCH our new video and learn why the Port Tobacco ERRA needs to be defeated and what the truth really is, what experts and planning officials think, and how the public’s will has so far been ignored.
If we don’t stop the ERRA, the historic, rural and natural characteristics of Port Tobacco may be ruined forever! Before it’s too late, WE MUST remind our county government that sprawl development in Port Tobacco will lead to: increases in runoff and pollution, more sedimentation from construction and development; and the potential destruction of our river, birds, fish, streams, forests, farmland, and open spaces.
THIS IS OUR WATERSHED MOMENT … SAVE OUR RIVER
ASK THE COMMISSIONERS TO VOTE NO ON THE PORT TOBACCO ERRA ZONE!
For more information, contact us at: news@wemakeitnews.com
More on that alleged “Open Meetings Act” violation

Please attend the 6 p.m., Jan. 31, Board of Commissioners public hearing in the county government auditorium and let the commissioners know you want them to REJECT the Port Tobacco Environmental Restoration and Recovery Area amendment — a possible gateway to allowing massive density increases in the Port Tobacco watershed and up-to-a-1,500-unit community near our impaired river!
By now, some of you have also heard that the Charles County government is looking into a concern raised by Debra Zimmerman Murphey (my wife and a Port Tobacco resident) about an alleged “Open Meetings Act’” violation. It pertains to a Charles County Planning Commission subcommittee meeting during which four planning commission members — usually considered a quorum — were assembled on Jan. 4, 2011. So far, accessible public records do not show that proper notification, or “public notice” that is in sync with state and local rules, was provided.
That meeting resulted in a vote that sent this ERRA amendment to the full planning commission for consideration, and it was later passed by the PC. (The ERRA used to be referred to as the Port Tobacco Environmental Recovery Zone or “ERZ.”)
This new zone could potentially affect the entire Port Tobacco watershed and the county’s rural and agricultural zones, allowing for major density increases of up to nine times, in exchange for an approved environmental improvement. *Please note that PC member Steve Bunker, who was on the subcommittee, voted in opposition, asking that it be considered through the 2012 comprehensive-plan update process.
Ms. Murphey and I attended that Jan. 4, 2011, PC subcommittee meeting after hearing about it through “the grapevine.” No one tried to throw us out and we were allowed to ask some questions — but let’s be clear about this: Two people, and a few others who attended and provided input at the subcommittee level, do not make up “the public.” People also need to know that open meetings rules guarantee notice and access, not necessarily participation. Still, the idea in a democracy is that the public can follow the deliberation and discussions tied to important government decisions.
But it wasn’t until Ms. Murphey started to dig into the details, in preparation for the recent BOC meeting, that she realized there may not have been public notice and she wanted to alert county government to this. Initially, the idea of a subcommittee of three seemed the reason, because public notice is not required in this instance (when there isn’t a quorum).
Still, this kind of “technicality” is important to parse: How does the average citizen gauge — and easily follow — what is happening, if “notice” and access to “public business” and decision-making is guaranteed in certain circumstances, but not in others? While legalities, rules and process may not always guarantee this kind of open decision-making, we hope that this allegation, under examination, will further widen the sphere of county government trust and integrity concerning what happens in public.
Ms. Murphey says: “When delving into this issue, it struck me: Is it typical or common practice for these subcommittees of three to be set up and then additional PC members regularly attend — because wouldn’t there be a presumption that a quorum could therefore happen in these cases? Seems like a safe bet to let the public have access to important decision-making, and use the most open approach and notice as a reliable standard.”
Here’s the audio from the Jan. 4, 2011 subcommittee meeting:
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