Granville Township Secretly Plans Sewer System

Sewer would allow faster commercial and residential growth.

New Township Trustee Bill Habig is heading a secret effort to bring water and sewer service to the township to allow for faster growth and development. The secret effort is an attempt to strip the Village of Granville of its power to slow and control growth.

Historically, Granville has been able to control the rate of growth and the density of residential development by controlling sewer and water. Bringing these utilities into the township close to the village would permit much faster growth and much denser housing with a serious impact on the school system.

Habig, who also helped William Kraner defeat the Granville School District’s efforts to limit growth on the developer’s property, declined to answer questions on his attempt to bring water and sewer to the township.

Habig has launched a two-pronged effort – with the knowledge of long-time trustee, Wes Sargent – to bring utilities to the township. Habig believes the township should construct its own water and sewer system to compete with the village, who he thinks is insufficiently supportive of development. Habig wrote, “Our township needs to get ready for economic development by creating its own water and sewer capacity in whatever way makes sense. The viallge [sic] will not help us.” in a September 19, 2007 email to trustee Wes Sargent.

At a September 6, 2007 breakfast meeting at Bob Evans, Habig asked the Southwest Licking Community Water & Sewer District if it would extend utilities to Weaver Drive at the village border. The meeting was attended by Tim Rollins of Metropolitan Partners, a developer who recently proposed building a fast-food restaurant with drive-thru at the village entrance on Main Street.

Habig, who was then chair of the Granville Township Zoning Commission, arranged for the meeting between Donald Rector, general manager of the Southwest Licking Community Water & Sewer District and Metropolitan Partners, owners of the former Shurtz property on South Main Street and 30+ acres of commercial land on Weaver Drive. Also during the meeting, a report prepared by a Columbus engineering firm, EMH&T, entitled “Mill District Development Sewage Treatment Review” dated May 2007 was presented to Mr. Rector.

EMH&T’s plan, done at the request of Metropolitan Partners, proposes the construction of an $800,000 sewage treatment package plant on River Road on Township property next to Lake Hudson and the driving range. The plan calls for an 8-inch sewer line running along River Road from Main Street to the package plant. The line would provide sewer service to the Metropolitan Partners property (the old Shurtz property) on Main Street as well as the other properties on River Road. The Ohio EPA would likely require all River Road property owners to pay to connect to the system. 

Southwest Licking was not interested in extending sewer and water service to the village border because of the cost and other issues. In an October 18, 2007 email to Tim Rollins of Metropolitan Partners, with a copy to Trustee Wes Sargent, Bill Habig wrote: "I called Don [Rector] and he said he had bigger issues with the county to handle first." Habig continued, "Don also said the [Licking County] commissioners may not support us not using Granville water and sewer."

In that same email, Habig went on to share some local politics with Rollins: "Our trustees will be selecting a new trustee next Wednesday. I’m one of five applicants. We have a Comp Plan meeting tonight at which I’m asking that Weaver be shown as commercial. Call me if we need to discuss." Habig was appointed by the Township Trustees as co-chair of the Comprehensive Plan committee. Constace Barskey was appointed co-chair by the Village Council.

Habig has not answered questions concerning this breakfast meeting, his role in setting it up, and his representation of Metropolitan Partners while serving as a Granville Township official.

View the Emails and supporting data: View

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Special Interests

gotta love it when floating leaches lobby locally ehhh…
wouldn’t be surprised if we all took a leap back to septic systems and porta potties …

something strange here...

This has been going on since September of last year? How come this is the first we have heard of this? If Habig was doing this with a developer, that seems like a real problem.

Keep up the good work Granville PRess.

Secret

The secret was uncovered by a public records request to the Southwest Licking Community Water & Sewer District.

Ahhh. So the secret was hidden in the Public Records. Gotcha.

That makes perfect sense. What better place to hide something, and act covertly. Who would EVER think to look in the Public Records File?

So, basically you had a private citizen/consultant contacting a public entity about a public use / private business matter, which was documented in the Public Records of said public entity.

I guess I’m still missing the secretive part. Am I to assume that you want a private business and thier consultant to make public their conversations that fly in the face of what you perceive to be “fair?”

Questions:

Why shouldn’t the township residents / businesses be entitled to seek out public utilities?

Why should the Village be the only game in town? Money and business flow to where they are wanted. Politics be damned.

Who gave the crown to the Village of Granville to decide who gets to use their water and sewer systems?

Obviously, the EPA has an opinion in opposition to the Village (see: Granville Intermediate School) acting as judge and jury when it comes to hook ups.

A secret?

Hard to believe the township is acting secretively since you were so able to access emails, notes from meetings, conversations and concepts. Maybe it has more to do with Thornborough’s secret dealings with the Ohio EPA to get a temporary permit to keep his overflowing septic system operating.

I see that Elaine Kent is one your contributors. I wonder how secretive things are since IT’S HER FAMILY THAT IS SELLING THE LAND (25+ acres on Weaver Drive) IN QUESTION! Give me a break!

Or maybe it’s Thornborough’s fear of competition. He calls a coffee shop a fast food restaurant, but he owns the building where River Road Coffee operates. Fishy.

Let’s share ALL THE FACTS, not just your version of the facts.