Hearing Postponed, Quarry Can Still Blast


FALLS VILLAGE — A Planning and Zoning public hearing on the renewal of a special permit for a Sand Road quarry has been rescheduled to later this month because of inadequate notification of nearby residents. The hearing was supposed to be held Jan. 24, during the commission’s regular meeting.

Sand Road resident Terri Curtis said she attended that meeting and pointed out to the commissioners that they need to notify all residents within 100 feet of the Century Aggregates quarry of such a hearing.

"I asked them about it and they agreed," Curtis said in an interview.

Last month’s hearing, which has been rescheduled for Feb. 28, was advertised in a legal notice in the Jan. 18 Lakeville Journal, but the neighbors were not notified either in writing or verbally.

Meanwhile, Century Aggregates, which can only mine stone with a special permit subject to renewal at the end of each year, can continue to mine and blast rock.

"Once the special permit application has been received and accepted for consideration by P&Z, the existing permit is extended until a decision is made," commission Chairman Fred Laser said in an e-mail.

The quarry has been the source of controversy for several years, most recently on Sept. 18, 2006, when an unusually loud blast went awry, frightening residents and sending large stones, some as large as a brick, more than 1,000 feet toward several neighboring homes. No one was injured.

That accident prompted Zoning Enforcement Officer Michael O’Neil to issue a cease-and-desist order prohibiting blasting until further notice.That order was lifted by the Planning and Zoning Commission Nov. 8 after Century agreed to use high-technology laser profiling designed to detect the kind of geological weakness that caused the fly-rock incident.


— Terry D. Cowgill

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