sn 7-29-2023

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The Sun and News, Saturday, July 29, 2023/ Page 3

Crane Road bridge in Middleville remains closed


Greg Chandler
Staff Writer
The bridge on Crane
Road over the Thornapple
River in the village of
Middleville will remain
closed for at least another
week or more as additional
repairs are made.
Department of Public
Works Director Alec
Belson updated the Village


Council on the status of the
project Tuesday night.
“From the very begin-
ning, the contractors and
engineers told us (it would
take) two weeks (to finish
the project),” Belson said.
“During the course of con-
struction, they started
removing some of the old
scour protections on the
riprap (below the bridge

deck). That was deter-
mined through the contrac-
tors and engineers that the
block wall that they were
intending to put in there
was not going to work. So
they diverted that, and
went into heavy riprap.
That is essentially
150-to-300-pound rocks,
placed underneath that
shoring on the east end of
the bridge.”
The scour protection is
meant to prevent potential
erosion at bridge abut-
ments.
Because of the project
change, the village had to
go back to the Michigan
Department of Environment,
Great Lakes and Energy to
get approval for revising
plans. EGLE gave approval
to the revisions on Friday
of last week, Belson said.
But because of schedul-
ing conflicts with contrac-
tors, the project has not yet
resumed. Work is expected
to pick back up on Monday,
Belson said.
“I’m in daily conversa-
tions with contractors, try-
ing to move it along as fast
as I can,” Belson said.
The Village Council in
February authorized
Village Manager Craig
Stolsonburg to sign a con-
tract with the Michigan
Department of
Transportation to under-

take preventive mainte-
nance repairs on the bridge,
following a 2019 inspec-
tion by engineering consul-
tant Williams and Works.
The project had an initial
estimated cost of $290,000,
with $130,000 coming from
the Local Development
Finance Authority and
another $50,000 coming
from an MDOT grant.

want,” Community
Development Director Dan
Wells said. “And then, we just
give that to the developer and
say, ‘You either meet what we
want or ... we’re not going to
approve it.’ It’s a better ham-
mer almost to say, ‘You have
to give us park space. You
have to give us amenities. You
have to give your residents
amenities. You have to build a
community that the vision of
this entire group of people
here — the leadership of this
township — has for what
we’re going to be.’”
Township officials say they
want the new zoning ordi-
nance to reflect the wishes of
citizens and other stakeholders
that were expressed in the
year-long input-gathering pro-
cess that planners conducted
for the new master plan and
future land-use plan that were
recently completed.
Fifteen township officials
participated in Monday’s
meeting, including David
Jirousek, township consultant
with the Horizon Community
Planning firm. He gave a pre-
sentation on the audit report
and various categories that
will be included in the zoning
ordinance.
Wells said the township has
a contract to pay Horizon up to
$50,000 to facilitate the
research and help carry out the
zoning ordinance update.
“I think the last full, com-
prehensive update was 2007,
and the index of the zoning
ordinance actually includes a


number of amendments from
2008 to 2022,” Jirousek said.
A steering committee con-
sisting of no more than three
members each from the town-
ship board, planning commis-
sion and Zoning Board of
Appeals will be working with
Horizon on the ordinance
update over the next few
months. As of late July, the
steering committee had met
twice. It is drawing up a draft
of the initial working chapters
of the zoning ordinance.
“And then, we’ll be going
to the planning commission
for public hearing and public
input in probably month four
or five. I think the project will
be completed in, maybe,
January to February 2024,”
Jirousek said.
The full audit of the project
will be based on the input of
various stakeholders, including
the public, township officials
and the steering committee in
conjunction with Horizon
Community Planning. The
new zoning ordinance will
reflect recent changes in case
law, the Michigan Zoning and
Enabling Act and best practices
in planning and zoning.
“So, there’s going to have
to be some changes in zoning
districts based on your mas-
ter-planning effort,” Jirousek
told members of the township
board and planning commis-
sion.
One objective of the plan-
ning would be to require that
developers of each future sub-
division set aside land for a

small community park within
the development. The parks
would be maintained by a
Homeowners Association
(HOA) in most cases.
Jirousek said some aspects
of the existing zoning ordi-
nance can be implemented in
the new zoning ordinance that
is being crafted, but several
sections of it will need to be
changed. One of the major
ones pertains to Planned Unit
Developments (PUDs). Right
now, projects have to go
through a lengthy site-plan
review process before they go
to the township board for
review.
That process often includes
a review of a proposed proj-
ect’s traffic impact and a
review by the drain commis-
sion or a state agency. And
then, the planning commission
has to review the initial site
plan and, later, the final site
plan before it eventually gets
to the township board.
“All of that work could
(cost) tens of thousands of
dollars ... in some cases, hun-
dreds of thousands of dollars
before an applicant even
knows if they’re going to get
an okay for a project,” Jirousek
said.
So, instead, he is recom-
mending that the preliminary
plan for a development project
be reviewed by the planning
commission and then go right
to the township board.
“You’d have an overall idea
of what the project details.
You’d have enough detail to

make a decision from a policy
perspective. And then later, it
comes back, so just the plan-
ning commission has the final
site plan,” Jirousek said.
Giarmo said the public
should be allowed to get
involved in the review process
much sooner than it currently
does on such projects. She cited
the Prairie Wolf Station devel-
opment as a prime example.
“It had been a year that we
had probably been involved
with this before they really got
to see the project,” Giarmo
said.
She estimated American
Kendall probably spent “thou-
sands and thousands of dol-
lars” researching utility needs
for the development before the
public ever got involved.
Instead, she said the public
should be invited to participate
in the process at the time of the
preliminary review.
“Then, it gives us a better
idea of what the community is
thinking, as well,” she said.
Jirousek said the planning
commission could hold a
pre-application listening ses-
sion in the early stages. It
would not be a public hearing.
“So, the public’s involved
from day one. You’re just up
there as a planning commis-
sion hearing the proposal at
the same time as the general
public. You have no obliga-
tion to give any input, but you
can. It would be non-binding,”
Jirousek said.
“I’ve been uncomfortable
with some of the PUDs,” Tim

Haagsma said. He sits on both
the township board and the
planning commission.
“The (developers) come
and do a preliminary (presen-
tation), and we look at it,” he
said. “Then we send it back.
Then they come back. We
send it back (again) and say,
‘Okay. Now let’s schedule a
public hearing.’ And then, by
the time the public gets around,
we’re talking to the developer
like we know this project inti-
mately. And the public’s
going, ‘Wait a minute. We
haven’t even seen it yet, and it
sounds like you’re going to

approve it.’ Well, probably
because we’ve already kicked
the tires and cut out all the
stuff we don’t like. It just feels
uncomfortable.”
Giarmo agreed that getting
the public involved earlier in
the planning process is a good
idea.
“I think it will make us a
little more comfortable as we
move ahead with PUDs,” she
said. “We sometimes hear
from the public about things
we didn’t really know about,
that we didn’t realize were
going on with the site that’s
being looked at.”

ZONING , continued from page 1


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Members of the Gaines Township Board and
Planning Commission held a joint workshop meeting
last Monday evening to discuss plans for a new zon-
ing ordinance. (Photo by James Gemmell)

Additional repair work will keep the Crane Road
bridge over the Thornapple River closed for at least
an additional week. (Photo by Greg Chandler)

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