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Hall County commissioners deny major residential rezones, approve industrial expansion and two retail alcohol licenses; Jackson EMC presents roughly $40,000
Summary
The Hall County Board of Commissioners on Jan. 23 voted to deny multiple large residential rezoning requests, approved an industrial expansion with additional conditions including coordination with the Georgia Department of Transportation, approved two convenience-store alcohol licenses, and accepted a Jackson EMC margin refund of about $40,000.
The Hall County Board of Commissioners on Jan. 23 voted to deny multiple large residential rezoning requests, approved an industrial expansion with additional conditions including coordination with the Georgia Department of Transportation, approved two convenience-store alcohol licenses, and accepted a Jackson EMC margin refund of about $40,000.
The board voted to deny a planned residential development application for a combined 68.83-acre tract on Benefield Road (Item 19) that the county staff said would have allowed a 302-unit residential development. The denial was made by motion of a commissioner after the item was removed from the table; the transcript records the motion to deny and the board’s affirmative vote but does not provide a roll-call tally or the mover’s full name. The item had been tabled at the board’s Dec. 12, 2024 meeting and was before the board for decision only.
The board also denied two related applications on Old Winder Highway (Items 20 and 21) that together would have added 38 townhomes to an existing planned residential development. The two items were heard together and the board’s motion to deny Item 20 carried; the transcript indicates that denial of Item 20 meant no further action was taken on Item 21. The transcript does not record a roll-call vote by name.
The board approved an application to amend the conditions of zoning for a planned industrial development on Cornelia Highway (Item 24) that would expand an existing cold-storage operation. Eric Cheney of Rochester DCCM described the change as driven by differing interpretations of watershed impervious-area rules and said the applicant proposes a 28,000-square-foot expansion to the existing facility and a new separate facility the applicant described in the hearing as "240" (number as stated in the transcript). Commissioners approved the application with the planning commission’s 17 recommended conditions plus an 18th condition requiring an acceleration lane between the existing facility entrance and the new…
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