ebook img

Dyess AFB JLUS Appendix PDF

364 Pages·2017·11.06 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Dyess AFB JLUS Appendix

Appendix This study was prepared under contract with the City of Abilene with financial support from the Office of Economic Adjustment, Department of Defense. The content reflects the views of the key JLUS partners involved in the development of this study and does not necessarily reflect the views of the Office of Economic Adjustment. APPENDIX Prepared for: City of Abilene 555 Walnut St Abilene, TX 79601 Phone: (325) 676-6200 Prepared by: December 2017 This study was prepared under contract with the City of Abilene, TX, with financial support from the Office of Economic Adjustment, Department of Defense. The content reflects the views of the City of Abilene and the jurisdictions, agencies, organizations, and other stakeholders involved in the development of this study and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Office of Economic Adjustment. Appendix A – Stakeholder Meetings ................................................................................................................ A-1   Appendix B – View-Caps Historical Insight ..................................................................................................... B-1   Appendix C – Public Health, Safety, and Welfare Statement ......................................................................... C-1   Appendix D – Public Survey Results ................................................................................................................ D-1   Appendix E – Public Workshop 2 Issue Importance Exercise Results ......................................................... E-1   Appendix F – Public Comments ....................................................................................................................... F-1 Public Workshop # 1, October 3, 2016.......................................................................................................... F‐2  Public Workshop # 2, March 6, 2017 .......................................................................................................... F‐13  Public Workshop # 3, October 18, 2017 ..................................................................................................... F‐15    Appendix G – Committee Comments .............................................................................................................. G-1 Committee Draft – Work In Progress – Background Report Chapters 1‐4 .................................................. G‐2  Committee Draft – Background Report Chapter 5..................................................................................... G‐55  Final Committee Draft Background Report Chapters 1‐5 –   comments from April 27, 2017 TAC meeting and comments submitted by committee members ........ G‐160  Final committee comments on Final Background Report – July 2017 .................................................... G‐216  Committee Comments on Draft JLUS Recommendations – August 2017 ............................................... G‐250  Comments on Committee Draft JLUS Report and Implementation Plan – October 2017 ...................... G‐292    Dyess AFB JLUS Appendix  Page i This page intentionally left blank.        Page ii    Dyess AFB JLUS Appendix Dyess AFB JLUS Appendix A – Stakeholder Meetings  The following page identifies stakeholder interviews, meetings, and discussions that occurred during the  JLUS process that were separate from the original public workshops, JLUS Technical Advisory  Committee, and Policy Committee meetings identified in the project Scope of Work.    An information meeting and introduction to the JLUS process was held with View / Caps property  owners on April 7, 2016    The primary data gathering and informational meetings and interviews were held the week of June 13,  2016.  The stakeholder groups below are those that were interviewed during this time.  Monday, June 13, 2016   Dyess AFB  Tuesday, June 14, 2016   Dyess AFB   View / Caps Community Property Owners  Wednesday, June 15, 2016   Taylor County   City of Abilene   Abilene Chamber of Commerce / Military Affairs Committee   West Texas Council of Governments  Thursday, June 16, 2016   City of Tye    During the week of October 3, 2016, two interviews were held with local real estate professionals to  discuss the outlook of local real estate trends to assist in the development of potential strategies for the  JLUS.    During the week of March 6, 2017, meetings were held with project stakeholders to discuss preliminary  JLUS strategy ideas.  The following groups were met with on March 7, 2017.  The attendees at these  meetings were representatives from the JLUS Technical Advisory Committee and Policy Committee.   View / Caps property owner representatives   City of Tye   Dyess AFB    During the week of April 24, 2017, meetings were held with project stakeholders to continue discussing  the development of JLUS strategies.  Meetings were held with the following groups to discuss and refine  strategies.   View / Caps property owner representatives – April 27, 2017   City of Abilene staff – April 28, 2017    Stakeholder Meetings A-1 Dyess AFB JLUS Appendix A – Stakeholder Meetings      This page is intentionally left blank  A-2 Dyess AFB JLUS Appendix A Dyess AFB JLUS Appendix B – View‐Caps Historical Insight  The following pages were prepared and compiled by residents of the View and Caps Communities to  provide background and historical insight into their experiences prior to the development of the Dyess  AFB Joint Land Use Study.  The text is presented in the original, unaltered format as provided by View‐ Caps representatives.  View-Caps Historical Insight B-1 Dyess AFB JLUS Appendix B – View‐Caps Historical Insight  This historical timeline is offered for inclusion to the Joint Land Use Study (JLUS) report in an effort to explain the intentions and motivations behind involvement and actions taken by the Caps community on behalf of Caps and the surrounding area during the JLUS process. It is this communities’ strongest desire to ensure there is no doubt within anyone who reads this history that our intent is to simply provide the history of the struggle between property owner rights and those who would limit or eliminate them. It is not our intent to cast aspersions on people or entities or to use it as a tool to continue an argument, but to simply put events in writing and ensure they are part of the JLUS record. It is felt that this is the best way to have the communities’ concerns documented and ensure current and future decision makers understand this area and its concerns over property rights better enabling them to make more informed decisions. We are a proud and patriotic community that is concerned about our area residents and we work hard to ensure we are included and heard when decisions are to be made concerning our properties and community. We share the same concerns as Taylor County, Abilene, Dyess AFB, and other surrounding communities and want to be a part of the decision making processes from conception to finish. No citizen who wants to participate should ever be excluded and we appreciate the efforts of all those involved in this current effort who are helping to make this happen in a more inclusive and productive manner. Caps is an unincorporated community south of Dyess Air Force Base (AFB). Caps and the surrounding area are within the Extraterritorial Jurisdiction (ETJ) of the City of Abilene within Taylor County, have a great amount of property within Dyess’ southern airfield safety zones (Clear Zone, Accident Potential Zones 1 & 2) and the hypothetical noise contours developed by the Department of Defense (DoD). It is the belief of many within this community that they have had to endure the repeated threats of erosion to their property rights due to overzealous individuals and Abilene City officials willing to do anything in the effort to assure the future of Dyess AFB or its favor. It is widely felt these overzealous entities routinely displayed no qualms subjugating or restricting property rights of ETJ property owners and often dealt with them with contempt and disdain in attempting to show local, state, and federal agencies that they have secured the future of Dyess AFB. Outwardly the rationale used to try and institute property restrictions in this area have varied, but the overall intent has always been to institute restrictions to show steps have been taken to inhibit future growth within the area and prevent any possible future encroachment issues between Dyess AFB and the local communities. While area residents may agree and support the overall intent, they often disagree with the degree and depth of restriction attempted. Additionally, partially due to the extreme measures attempted and the contemptuous treatment by some making the decisions, area property owners object to individuals or organizations that have no stake in the area making decision that suit themselves often without asking for input from those most affected and often disregarding any negative impacts to the actual property owners. It should be noted that despite findings within the Dyess AFB AICUZ, it is a widely held belief among officials within Taylor County, Abilene and Dyess AFB that there was no activity within the community causing any encroachment concerns before or during the JLUS process. These communities within the ETJ are not anti-military, anti-Dyess, or even anti-Abilene. The area is filled with citizens who enjoy their freedoms and thank God and those in our military for providing them. They appreciate Dyess as part of the community and all it provides and are proud to call it a neighbor. The distrust and marginalized feelings within this community stem from decades of real and perceived slights and abuses over a variety of issues as well as being treated with irrelevance by people whom area residence are unable to vote for because though B-2 Dyess AFB JLUS Appendix B

Description:
They appreciate Dyess as part of the community and all it provides and are On December 7, 2006 the city council discussed item 4.4, to consider On March 27, 2008 the city council, through resolution 11-2008, designated “29th Training Squadron” should be “29th Training Systems Squadron,
See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.