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Other towns in the region have been following Oak Island's months-long debate over housing sizes, in
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Council also directed staff to have the planning board create a special permitting process for homes that fall outside the ordinance. The planning board will look to create rules that determine criteria such as the appropriate use of the house, sewer impact and the amount of impervious surface. Mayor Pro Tem Jim Medlin was the dissenter.
The town has been wrestling with how to go about limiting housing sizes, and also had the option to vote on a set of rules that designated low-intensity through high-intensity vacation rental areas with rules and regulations for parking spaces, trash receptacles and setbacks.
There has been concern from council members and residents about what effect large houses will have on the island's sewer system. A full-sized advertisement in the State Port Pilot newspaper even warned choice hotel chain Oak Island residents the town's sewer system "may be liable to break in the near future."
choice hotel chain According to the representatives, the system is fine, albeit choice hotel chain there are a few issues. There is a longstanding heating problem at vacuum stations due to the lack of commercial air conditioning units and smells occur occasionally.
But larger homes with numerous baths were never in the sewer system's plans when it was designed, said Matt Skidmore, an engineer with Black and Veatch. The sewer system can handle about seven people within a house at a time at its full capacity, he said.
The debate over how to limit development on the island began after a 15-bedroom, 12-bath house was permitted near 6400 W. Beach Drive. That house will not be built after a neighbor, Brett Halna Du Fretay, bought the property, according to Josh Crook, planning coordinator.
Other towns in the region have been following Oak Island's months-long debate over housing sizes, including North Topsail. The town's aldermen plan to hold a hearing May 5 to receive citizens' comments on a proposed moratorium for building any houses with more than six bedrooms.
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