NEWPORT-Advocates for a new residential treatment center
for recovering drug addicts and alcoholics on Woodlawn Avenue faced strong
opposition by neighboring residents and a lawyer on Thursday at a meeting of
the Newport Regional Planning Commission.
The commission delayed a vote on the new center until its
next meeting on July 30 so it and an attorney representing opponents to the
plan can consult with City Attorney Terry Hurst about the matter.
Site Plan Proposed
At Thursday's meeting, Michael McCarter, operations
manager for Tennessee Community Health Services' current facility at 211
Woodlawn Ave., presented a proposed site plan for commission approval.
If approved, the plan calls for converting a white
residence with a picket fence near the intersection of Woodlawn Avenue and
College Street into an eight-bed residential treatment center.
The address of the new facility would be 231 Woodlawn
Ave. It is very close to the existing 10-bed facility, which is called Mimosa
Manor. They are located in a residential area that also has a Methodist church
nearby-and less than two blocks away, Newport Grammar School.
The Planning Commission approved the concept for the new
treatment center at its last meeting, held in May, apparently before they were
aware of the controversy the plan has generated.
Residents and Lawyer State Opposition
Opponents have apparently been active since planning
commissioners met in May.
At Thursday's meeting, Tyler Roberts said he owns a home
situated between the two properties, at 225 Woodlawn Ave.
His attorney, Bryan Delius, who said he practices law in
Sevierville, argued at length about why his client Roberts and other residents
in the area oppose the new treatment center.
Delius also presented a petition with 31 names on it to
the Planning Commission of what he said were residents who live close to Mimosa
Manor and the proposed facility. The petition opposes an expansion of treatment
services in the area.
Delius also presented photos showing heavy vehicle
traffic in the area that Roberts said he took in the last two to three recent
years.
"In the last few months the traffic flow has been
less," Roberts acknowledged. Prior to that period of time, however,
traffic going into Mimosa Manor or leaving it was noticeable "on an hourly
basis," he added.
Substance Abuse Center Residents Described
McCarter said the residents were "non-violent"
and "non-felons," and that they must be accompanied by a staff member
when they walk around beyond the facility's property.
Tyler said there was "no way of knowing which people
were staff." He added, "I've seen pedestrians lounging around on the
grass" in the front section of Mimosa Manor, visible to passersby.
Other residents attended Thursday's meeting to voice
their complaints and opposition to a new facility.
Drugs dropped off?
One said he had seen brown bags dropped from vehicles
that passed in front of Mimosa Manor, indicating illicit drugs or maybe alcohol
were being supplied to clients of the substance abuse center by friends or
dealers.
Other complaints lodged:
• Cars stopping in front of Mimosa Manor in a lane of
traffic to talk to residents being treated there, which thwarts the flow of
traffic. It was also alleged that some of the traffic to or from the facility
is also reckless.
• Noisy clients at Mimosa Manor playing basketball up to
11 p.m. at night.
• Blaring music with lyrics containing profanity.
• One client allegedly knocked on the window of an
elderly neighbor in the area late at night.
• Waking up neighbors at night because of loud noises
coming from Mimosa Manor.
Facility Will Be Close to Grammar School
• The new facility is only about one and one-half blocks
from Newport Grammar School on College Street.
Debbie Wiley, who said she has lived in a house across
the street from Mimosa Manor for 24 years, got emotional at times as she spoke
her grievances.
She said if residents are in "rehab" at Mimosa
Manor, they shouldn't be playing basketball at 11 p.m.
Wiley also said that because music with profanity was
played loudly, she can no longer sit on her front porch, relax, and be
undisturbed.
"I'm in nursing," Wiley said, "so I
understand rehab. But why not have it away from residences?"
McCarter did his best to answer the complaints.
Roberts said McCarter has been available in the past to
hear complaints from residents.
"I'll give Michael (McCarter) credit. We've
spoken," he said.
McCarter said curfew at Mimosa Manor was 10 p.m.
Rules At Center Not Being Enforced?
After Roberts and Wiley shared their numerous concerns,
planning commissioner Mansfield McMann addressed McCarter and said, "What
seems to be the problem is, your rules aren't being enforced."
"I can't be there 24/7," conceded McCarter.
McMann added that Thursday's meeting was the first time
he had heard complaints about Mimosa Manor and the proposed new facility.
Delius, the lawyer for Roberts, said the new facility
would violate several zoning regulations.
He said, for example, that there was no 10-foot buffer zone
around the proposed facility to separate it from an adjoining residence, as
required. He also said it was not set back at least 40 feet from Woodlawn
Avenue.
"It's a commercial structure being shoe-horned into
a residential area," Delius said of the proposed facility.
However, Planning Commission Chairman Cecil Gilland said,
"It's hard to enforce a 40-foot setback requirement for existing
buildings."
Action Postponed Until July
Delius asked commissioners to table the discussion until
the next meeting so he and the planning commissioners could meet with the city
attorney before a vote on the proposed site plan for the new facility takes
place.
Planning commissioner Dennis Thornton made a motion to
that effect, and it was passed unanimously.
The Planning Commission first convened on Thursday as the
Newport Board of Zoning Appeals. It then adjourned and immediately reassembled
as the Newport Regional Planning Commission.
The franchisee for Aaron's at 628 Cosby Highway, Bill
Jenkins, successfully argued that its display on a pole in front of the store,
which is run up in the mornings while the store is open and removed every
evening, meets the definition of a flag, and not a commercial banner. The flag
has "Aaron's" written on it.
If the board of zoning appeals had ruled it an
advertising banner, it would not have been allowed to be displayed as close as
it is to Cosby Highway.
New Flood Plain Maps Recommended
In other business, the Planning Commission approved a
motion to recommend to the Newport City Council that they adopt new flood plain
maps from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
State planner Troy Ebbert said the new maps are more
precise than existing ones, "all digital," and will
"eventually" be available online.
The maps are slated to go into effect Sept. 25.
Finally, the planning commission unanimously approved a
2009-2010 Annual Performance Report and Planning Program Design from the state
planning office.
According to the report, its principal purpose is
"to provide the Planning Commission with an evaluation of the community's
overall planning program, and to establish a work plan for the year ahead.
Simply put, it is a 'plan for planning' in the community.