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‘Renfro House’ ordinance tabled by city council

BY MICHELLE KEY
MICHELLE@
OPELIKAOBSERVER.COM

OPELIKA — During its March 5 meeting, the Opelika City Council voted to table the ordinance that proposed the rezoning of property located at 414 N. 10th St. from R2 to an I1 (industrial zone.)
The council announced plans to consider amending the current city ordinance pertaining to the R2 zone to allow for a provisional use permit for a bed and breakfast to operate within the zone without the property having to be rezoned.
“What I care about is that the public knows that we, as the council, was listening to what they were saying and try to react accordingly,” said Council President Eddie Smith. “We want to have everybody happy, but that is not a possibility; but it is a possibility to make most of them happy, and so what we did tonight was move away from a rezoning and move to what they [citizens opposed to the rezoning] were okay with — it being a bed and breakfast — but they don’t want it rezoned, so that is what we’re going to try to do.”
Smith said the process to do a text amendment to an ordinance can take approximately 90 days.
“It has to go through the very same things that other zoning requests go through,” he explained. “The reason we tabled it rather than deny it was because it could not come back for [consideration] for a year.”
Ward 3 council member Tim Aja publicly addressed some of the correspondence he received in which a threat was made toward the council.
“The few communications that went straight to threatening legal action against this body and trying to intimidate us into not doing our job is not well received,” Aja said. “Let me be absolutely clear; we do not take that intimidation lightly. It is not to be done and don’t expect anything but an antagonistic response in the future. It is your right to file suit if you feel that you want to. That is fine. But do not threaten.”

JOB WELL DONE
Opelika Mayor Gary Fuller and Sutricia Johnson from Keep Opelika Beautiful recognized Davis Fischer, a first-grade student from Jeter Primary School for a job well-done. Recently, while on the way to school, Davis noticed some trash littering the side of the road and asked his dad if he could take him back to the area after school so that he could pick up the trash.
Davis is the son of Jonathan Fischer, assistant prinicpal at Fox Run School and Kelly Fischer, principal at Opelika High School.
Davis received a certificate and a gift from the city of Opelika for his efforts to help Keep Opelika Beautiful.

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