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called the State Board of Health and that business does not need a permit for it is not <br />regulated in any way. When they have a chance they do stop in and check on what's <br />going on. Whether they have done this he honestly does not know. There have been two <br />precedence set of zoning changes in this area and they were both turned down. Twenty- <br />five years ago there was a machine shop situation and about a year ago there was a <br />request to change zoning to build a garage for auto repair. In both cases they were turned <br />down. So there is precedence in this situation. His biggest question is why after <br />operating this business for the time that he has why does he need a zoning change now. <br />Mr. Currens state that someone filed a complaint and he was called in front of the Plan <br />Commission to cease and exist, because his property was not properly zoned for this <br />business. Mr. Swango said he did not know that and that was frae. For the garage they <br />filled the room up, because they were notified, but to his knowledge in this situation only <br />two people were notified of the meeting. The rest of the people here heard by word of <br />mouth. Mr. Currens stated that his obligation was to send to adjoining property owner's <br />at least two deep or if their property is large enough they do not have to go beyond that. <br />He asked if his property adjoined this property and Mr. Swango said a comer would for <br />he has five acres across the fence from him there. He does not know where his property <br />line is from his brother's property line <br /> <br />Mr. Brace Fairhurst, 10869 N. Bethel Road, said he did not feel it was over 600 ft. to Mr. <br />Swango's property. He has found deer legs in the field behind his house when he was <br />running his dogs last year. He feels it is a nuisance when your dogs start dragging stuff <br />into your yard. <br /> <br />Mr. Todd Seals, 2303 E Crosby Road, his property is diagonal from Mike Swango's <br />property where he backs up to Shannon's property. He has not had any problems as far <br />as the bones being in his yard, but he has a problem with zoning being changed for a <br />business. They have already been in before trying to keep business away from residential <br />area and he has lived there since 1991 and the zoning has been residential and agriculture. <br />He has had cows in the field behind him when he moved there, but no slaughtering or any <br />of that; they were just raised in the field and taken somewhere else for all that. He would <br />like for it to stay residential, for if you allow one business in what would keep the place <br />from becoming a business area. <br /> <br />Mr. d that several people had stated we were concerned about the zoning <br />change, and we are not changing the zoning, but changing the use in the existing zoning. <br />It is zoned agriculture and what we are doing is to determine that they follow the criteria <br />for a variance of use. They are not changing the zoning, but allowing a variance of use in <br />the area. Mr. Seals wanted to know if the variance were allowed, who would be <br />responsible for disposable of bones, since people have had bones in their yards. The dogs <br />are out all night waiting for the bones to be put in the dumpster and barking making noise <br />which is a nuisance to the neighbors. Who in going to maintain that everyone's yards <br />will stay clean? Who governs what is put in the dumpster and how often it is taken? <br />Valeria said that they pick up the dumpster at five or six o'clock in the morning and that <br />is a lot of noise when people are trying to sleep. <br /> <br /> <br />