Stratus Properties hit a snag on its way to City Council last week with the grim discovery that thousands of Circle C-area residents were unaware of development plans for a hodgepodge of tracts bordering their neighborhoods.
The Zoning and Platting Commission was supposed to have considered several Stratus zoning requests at its May 14 meeting, but commissioners decided to continue the case to May 21 after a number of homeowners said they had no prior knowledge about development plans for the tracts that checker the landscape along Slaughter Lane and South MoPac.
Circle C HOA leaders knew more about the Stratus deal than they were apparently willing to share with some 7,000 Circle C homeowners. The Circle C leadership -- long rumored to be henchmen for developer Gary Bradley (a charge that is routinely denied) -- had been negotiating with Stratus outside of another stakeholder group consisting of environmental and neighborhood leaders. In a November 2001 e-mail sent to state and local officials, longtime Circle C officer Ken Rigsbee freely acknowledged withholding information from residents in an attempt to ''minimize the bomb throwers.'' The e-mail also named the Save Barton Creek Association and the Save Our Springs Alliance as detractors in the effort to bring new roadways to Southwest Austin. Bradley is spearheading a proposal to extend SH 45 from FM 1626 in the southwest to I-35 and eventually SH 130, and the Stratus development, of course, would help justify the need for the highway. ''We resent the posture taken by representatives of those respective groups as having some vestige of a vested interest in the Circle C Ranch,'' Rigsbee wrote. Rigsbee did not respond to telephone or e-mail messages left by the Chronicle.
Stratus CEO Beau Armstrong expressed dismay over the Rigsbee e-mail. ''That's disappointing because we were led to believe that by dealing with the Circle C board, we were dealing with the homeowners,'' he said. ''The mistake that people make is thinking that everybody thinks like them.''
Said one Circle C North resident who requested anonymity, ''We're coming together because we feel [the Circle C HOA] is clearly not working in our best interest.'' Of the Circle C residents at Sunday's meeting, some 30 homeowners reside in Circle C North and about 10 live in the larger, more prominent Circle C South.
The Zoning and Platting Commission was supposed to have considered several Stratus zoning requests at its May 14 meeting, but commissioners decided to continue the case to May 21 after a number of homeowners said they had no prior knowledge about development plans for the tracts that checker the landscape along Slaughter Lane and South MoPac.
Circle C HOA leaders knew more about the Stratus deal than they were apparently willing to share with some 7,000 Circle C homeowners. The Circle C leadership -- long rumored to be henchmen for developer Gary Bradley (a charge that is routinely denied) -- had been negotiating with Stratus outside of another stakeholder group consisting of environmental and neighborhood leaders. In a November 2001 e-mail sent to state and local officials, longtime Circle C officer Ken Rigsbee freely acknowledged withholding information from residents in an attempt to ''minimize the bomb throwers.'' The e-mail also named the Save Barton Creek Association and the Save Our Springs Alliance as detractors in the effort to bring new roadways to Southwest Austin. Bradley is spearheading a proposal to extend SH 45 from FM 1626 in the southwest to I-35 and eventually SH 130, and the Stratus development, of course, would help justify the need for the highway. ''We resent the posture taken by representatives of those respective groups as having some vestige of a vested interest in the Circle C Ranch,'' Rigsbee wrote. Rigsbee did not respond to telephone or e-mail messages left by the Chronicle.
Stratus CEO Beau Armstrong expressed dismay over the Rigsbee e-mail. ''That's disappointing because we were led to believe that by dealing with the Circle C board, we were dealing with the homeowners,'' he said. ''The mistake that people make is thinking that everybody thinks like them.''
Said one Circle C North resident who requested anonymity, ''We're coming together because we feel [the Circle C HOA] is clearly not working in our best interest.'' Of the Circle C residents at Sunday's meeting, some 30 homeowners reside in Circle C North and about 10 live in the larger, more prominent Circle C South.