Ashland Town Council approves Ironhorse CPA 3-2

In its May 16 meeting Town Council took action on the “action item” CPA2022-06 Ironhorse Business Park. In a vote of 3-2, with Mayor Steve Trivett and Council member Kathy Abbott casting dissenting votes.

“Confusion” might be a good descriptor for the evening. There was never a clear format for discussion or input, though public comment was taken. Council members expressed their concerns and visions for the Ironhorse proposal’s effects on Ashland into the future, but their discussion did not result in a unified position. The motion process, with several missteps, was also hard to follow.

Developers have promised a rezoning application would be filed soon after a CPA approval. Town officials have promised citizens will have ample opportunities for input on specifics as the rezoning case goes forward.

The stage is set for the next act.

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Ironhorse on May 16 Town Council docket

Ashland Town Council will take up consideration of CPA2022-06 Ironhorse Business Park at its May 16 meeting at 6:30 p.m. in Council chambers. This meeting was termed “a continuation of the public meeting” when announced in the May 8 Town-citizen meeting. It is unknown if Council will take public comment.

Developer has said a rezoning application will be filed soon after this comprehensive plan amendment is approved by Ashland. To address citizen worries that the level of detail is already fixed for the flex warehouse development, Town officials have assured citizens that they will have opportunity to have input on various aspects as the rezoning case goes through its process.

Citizens are finding this assurance condescending and insufficient.

Notable concerns with the proposal include:

  • additional traffic at this overloaded interstate node;
  • environmental damage to wetlands and groundwater;
  • loss of green and open space;
  • compromise of existing residential neighborhoods and roads;
  • hardening of the suburban-rural transition; and
  • excessive warehouses adding to a bloated inventory.

Citizens need to keep speaking up before the CPA is passed. This development is a threat to quality of life that Town and County residents value.

Ashland Town Council to hold Ironhorse community meeting May 8

The Ironhorse Business Park proposal is again up for scrutiny and inquiry. 

Ashland Town Council authorized a community meeting for Monday, May 8, 6:00 p.m., in Town Hall, following its 5-0 vote on April 18 to defer action on CPA2022-06 Ironhorse Business Park. 

This is an opportunity for citizens to ask questions, voice concerns and advocate for wise and inspired land use planning as the community contemplates this development juggernaut.

Background of the proposal:

Applicant is seeking to change the land use on approximately 120 acres in the Town to Interstate Commercial, Office/Industrial and Open Space. A rezoning application would then be filed for a development of 1.9 million square feet of flex warehouses and a commercial strip of gas stations, hotel and quick in/out restaurants east along Rte 54.

Another parcel of similar size lies in the County and is the other portion of the Ironhorse Business Park.

Community Meeting Agenda and Format:

Per the Town website, this will be a two-part meeting:

6:00-6:30 p.m. – Citizens visit stations set up with maps, renderings and diagrams; speak with Town staff; and submit questions or comments on index cards.

6:30-8:30 p.m. – Town staff will assemble index cards; read all comments aloud; and respond. All questions and comments will be read.

See this link for fuller description of the community meeting: 

https://www.ashlandva.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?AID=626

Click here for an overview of the proposal and the full application. Questions about the application ahead of the meeting should be sent to planning@ashlandva.gov or call (804) 798-9219.

The next Town Council meeting is Tuesday, May 16, when Council is expected to take action on CPA2022-06, Ironhorse Business Park

Notable concerns:

Residents have raised concerns about additional traffic at this overloaded interstate node; environmental damage to wetlands and groundwater; loss of green and open space; compromise of existing residential neighborhoods and roads; hardening of the suburban-rural transition; and excessive warehouses adding to a bloated inventory.

Attend the meeting. Ask questions. Express your concerns. The citizen voice matters.