Watauga Democrat
January 20, 2009


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Town floats Kraut

Creek restoration
BY FRANK RUGGIERO
 
A $5,000 commitment from the town of Boone will help float the restoration of Kraut Creek.

The Boone Town Council approved the funding after a request by George Santucci, executive director of the National Committee for the New River, at the council’s Jan. 15 regular meeting.

The committee is targeting a portion of the creek near the Boone Mall for restoration. Since the mall is situated on a flood plain, its parking lot is regularly subjected to flooding. “It’s a struggle,” Santucci admitted, adding that the committee had conversations with the mall’s owners about the restoration project.

“What we know could happen is if we put enough properties together, we can alleviate some of the storm-water problems in this section of Boone,” he said.

Kraut Creek crosses near the mall and flows toward Boondocks Street, where flooding has caused about 4-feet of stream bank to collapse near Hampton’s Body Shop, Santucci said, and a culvert by Precision Printing is about half blocked by tree stumps and other debris. “That culvert, itself, is not doing very well and structurally is not sound and will likely fail at some point in the future,” Santucci said.

By converting some property into greenspace, a flood plain could be restored to a creek with no flood plain other than smaller restorations near Howard Street, Santucci said, with restoration to also focus on areas near Jimmy Smith Park and the parking lot adjacent to Café Portofino on Rivers Street.

“It’s one more in a series of restorations along Kraut Creek to try to alleviate some of the storm-water challenges … the town is facing,” Santucci said.

He said the committee will submit a planning grant application Feb. 1 to the Clean Water Management Trust Fund and, as such, is requesting a matching commitment from the town of Boone for $5,000. The grant will likely fit the sum of $40,000, to be used to hire engineers and commence restoration work.

Council member Rennie Brantz moved to approve the commitment, council member Liz Aycock seconded, and the motion carried unanimously.

The council also allocated $2,267 to WAMY Community Action to assist in property tax aid.

ancey counties) is a nonprofit organization targeting poverty. The organization recently moved into the new Family Resource Center near Deerfield Road, which formerly housed Blue Ridge Pediatrics, with fellow nonprofit agency OASIS (Opposing Abuse with Service, Information and Shelter), an organization dedicated to ending domestic violence.

Melissa Soto, representing WAMY, told council members that the nonprofits have to pay some of the pediatrics’ offices remaining property tax, a one-time occurrence from 2008.

Aycock moved to allocate the funding, and Brantz seconded. Mayor pro tem Lynne Mason asked if any other nonprofits occupied the building, and whether for-profit ventures had opened there. Soto said there are five or six offices the organizations are trying to rent to either nonprofit or for-profit entities, one of which is rented to a massage therapist, who would be assessed taxes. Soto said the nonprofits would be taxed for their tenants, the amount of which would be included in the tenant’s rent.

The motion carried unanimously.

Other Matters
The council scheduled its upcoming retreats, both of which will be held in council chambers to save money, a notion suggested by council member Stephen Phillips.


The planning retreat will be held Monday, Feb. 9, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., while the council retreat will take place Friday, Feb. 20, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.



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