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Council to hear request for Richmond Hill Plantation
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The Richmond Hill City Council will hold its regular meeting Tuesday night at City Hall.

The meeting will start at 6:30 p.m. with a public hearing on a request from Steve Croy for a revised master plan for Richmond Hill Plantation – a planned development on a 112-acre parcel on Ford Avenue just east of Timber Trail Road. The council is expected to vote on the request later in the meeting.

Other items on the agenda include:

· Swearing in of new council memebers.

· Presentations to outgoing council members.

· Election and swearing in of mayor pro-tem.

· Request from Coastal Community Christian Church for a minor subdivision and recombination of three parcels into one 15-acre parcel at 1175 Harris Trail Road.

· Request from Coastal Community Christian Church to rezone 15 acres at 1175 Harris Trail Road to C-1, neighborhood commercial.

· Request from Jeff Shaw of Nightingale Properties for the building elevations of the façade of the Goodwill Industries site at 9701 Ford Ave. The property is zoned C-3, general commercial.

· Request from Kenneth Yancey with Sign-a-Rama for a variance on the height, from 25 feet to 30 feet, and square footage, from 50 square feet to 223.50 square feet, on two common freestanding signs for the new development at the old Kroger.

· Request from Seacoast Development to rezone the property at 8805 Ford Ave. from R-1, residential, to C-3, general commercial.

· Request from Dillon Baynes for the master plan of Harris Trail Townhomes, 42 units to on Harris Trail Road. The property is zoned R-3, multi-family residential.

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Later yall, its been fun
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This is among the last pieces I’ll ever write for the Bryan County News.

Friday is my last day with the paper, and come June 1 I’m headed back to my native Michigan.

I moved here in 2015 from the Great Lake State due to my wife’s job. It’s amicable, but she has since moved on to a different life in a different state, and it’s time for me to do the same.

My son Thomas, an RHHS grad as of Saturday, also is headed back to Michigan to play basketball for a small school near Ann Arbor called Concordia University. My daughter, Erin, is in law school at University of Toledo. She had already begun her college volleyball career at Lourdes University in Ohio when we moved down here and had no desire to leave the Midwest.

With both of them and the rest of my family up north, there’s no reason for me to stay here. I haven’t missed winter one bit, but I’m sure I won’t miss the sand gnats, either.

Shortly after we arrived here in 2015, I got a job in communications with a certain art school in Savannah for a few short months. It was both personally and professionally toxic and I’ll leave it at that.

In March 2016 I signed on with the Bryan County News as assistant editor and I’ve loved every minute of it. My “first” newspaper career, in the late 80s and early 90s, was great. But when I left it to work in politics and later with a free-market think tank, I never pictured myself as an ink-stained wretch again.

Like they say, never say never.

During my time here at the News, I’ve covered everything that came along. That’s one big difference between working for a weekly as opposed to a daily paper. Reporters at a daily paper have a “beat” to cover. At a weekly paper like this, you cover … life. Sports, features, government meetings, crime, fundraisers, parades, festivals, successes, failures and everything in between. Oh, and hurricanes. Two of them. I’ll take a winter blizzard over that any day.

Along the way I’ve met a lot of great people. Volunteers, business owners, pastors, students, athletes, teachers, coaches, co-workers, first responders, veterans, soldiers and yes, even some politicians.

And I learned that the same adrenalin rush from covering “breaking news” that I experienced right out of college is still just as exciting nearly 30 years later.

With as much as I’ve written about the population increase and traffic problems, at least for a few short minutes my departure means there will be one less vehicle clogging up local roads. At least until I pass three or four moving vans headed this way as I get on northbound I-95.

The hub-bub over growth here can be humorous, unintentional and ironic all at once. We often get comments on our Facebook page that go something like this: “I’ve lived here for (usually less than five years) and the growth is out of control! We need a moratorium on new construction.”

It’s like people who move into phase I of “Walden Woods” subdivision after all the trees are cleared out and then complain about trees being cut down for phase II.

Bryan County will always hold a special place in my heart and I definitely plan on visiting again someday. My hope is that my boss, Jeff Whitten (one of the best I’ve ever had), will let me continue to be part of the Pembroke Mafia Football League from afar. If the Corleone family could expand to Vegas, there’s no reason the PMFL can’t expand to Michigan.

But the main reason I want to return someday is about that traffic issue. After all, I’ll need to see it with my own eyes before I’ll believe that Highway 144 actually got widened.

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