The Snider-Thornton Annexation
12-28-2006
I gather, from reading the recent Ohio Supreme Court decision on this matter, that five years ago the Fairfield County Board of Commissioners approved the annexation by the Village of Canal Winchester of several hundred acres of land in Violet Township, in or near the commercially valuable US 33 corridor.
Both landowners had agreed to this annexation, but one had second thoughts about it, and attempted to challenge it. However, the challenge became wrapped up in a controversy over the effective date of amendments to Ohio's annexation law, which changed the procedures for mounting such challenges.
Petitions seeking to subject these amendments to a referendum had been submitted on the 90th day after the law's passage, just hours before the law otherwise would have taken effect. The petitions were later determined to lack sufficient signatures.
The question before the Ohio Supreme Court was, did the amendments take effect at midnight on the 90th day after the law's passage, or on the date some months later when the Ohio Secretary of State finally announced the petition's insufficiency? That was the only game in town, as far as the Snider-Thornton annexation was concerned.
The Supreme Court, in its recent decision, opted for the latter view, and remanded the case to our Fairfield County court for final determination. Since, however, the effect of the Supreme Court's decision apparently is to render the annexation challenge invalid, there does not now seem much doubt about the outcome of this matter. Its too late to mount a new challenge.
Correct me if I am wrong, but this does not seem to be a happy result for our community. Hundreds of acres suitable for commercial development stand to be lost to this community's taxpayers. I would be very interested in knowing how much land along the US 33 corridor Violet Township now has left. I also would be interested in knowing why our Township Board of Trustees apparently did not themselves challenge this annexation.
But I think our primary focus should be on what might have been done to keep this sort of thing from happening, and on what we can do to keep it from happening again.
Again, correct me if I am wrong, but I do not believe anything like this could have happened if, before these annexation proceedings began, Violet Township and the City of Pickerington had merged to form a single city.
It also seems to me that our best hope for commercial development that will benefit this community's taxpayers now lies to the southeast of Violet Township along US 33, and to the northeast of Violet Township along Interstate 70. Violet Township, lacking annexation powers, can do nothing about this.
If the township merged with the city, we might be able to annex such land. Absent such a merger, however, neighboring municipalities may continue to gobble up what remains of Violet Township.
Please give this some thought.
-By Yosemite Pam
By Yosemite Pam
12-28-2006
I gather, from reading the recent Ohio Supreme Court decision on this matter, that five years ago the Fairfield County Board of Commissioners approved the annexation by the Village of Canal Winchester of several hundred acres of land in Violet Township, in or near the commercially valuable US 33 corridor.
Both landowners had agreed to this annexation, but one had second thoughts about it, and attempted to challenge it. However, the challenge became wrapped up in a controversy over the effective date of amendments to Ohio's annexation law, which changed the procedures for mounting such challenges.
Petitions seeking to subject these amendments to a referendum had been submitted on the 90th day after the law's passage, just hours before the law otherwise would have taken effect. The petitions were later determined to lack sufficient signatures.
The question before the Ohio Supreme Court was, did the amendments take effect at midnight on the 90th day after the law's passage, or on the date some months later when the Ohio Secretary of State finally announced the petition's insufficiency? That was the only game in town, as far as the Snider-Thornton annexation was concerned.
The Supreme Court, in its recent decision, opted for the latter view, and remanded the case to our Fairfield County court for final determination. Since, however, the effect of the Supreme Court's decision apparently is to render the annexation challenge invalid, there does not now seem much doubt about the outcome of this matter. Its too late to mount a new challenge.
Correct me if I am wrong, but this does not seem to be a happy result for our community. Hundreds of acres suitable for commercial development stand to be lost to this community's taxpayers. I would be very interested in knowing how much land along the US 33 corridor Violet Township now has left. I also would be interested in knowing why our Township Board of Trustees apparently did not themselves challenge this annexation.
But I think our primary focus should be on what might have been done to keep this sort of thing from happening, and on what we can do to keep it from happening again.
Again, correct me if I am wrong, but I do not believe anything like this could have happened if, before these annexation proceedings began, Violet Township and the City of Pickerington had merged to form a single city.
It also seems to me that our best hope for commercial development that will benefit this community's taxpayers now lies to the southeast of Violet Township along US 33, and to the northeast of Violet Township along Interstate 70. Violet Township, lacking annexation powers, can do nothing about this.
If the township merged with the city, we might be able to annex such land. Absent such a merger, however, neighboring municipalities may continue to gobble up what remains of Violet Township.
Please give this some thought.
-By Yosemite Pam
By Yosemite Pam