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Chapel Hill stormwater information meeting tonight

Chapel Hill will hold a public information meeting from 5:30 to 7 p.m. today about proposed stormwater changes that could help homeowners but reduce local stream buffers.

The meeting will be held in the first-floor conference room at Town Hall, 405 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.

The Jordan Lake ordinance requires 50-foot buffers to protect streams, lakes, ponds and reservoirs. It also limits the way development can disturb the land within those buffers.

The town’s resource conservation district typically requires wider buffers. It also requires engineered stormwater controls, including bio-retention ponds, when a single- or two-family home disturbs 5,000 square feet of land or more. That can increase a home’s price by $25,000 to $30,000, plus maintenance costs. It also creates aesthetic and safety issues, homeowners said.

The proposed change would increase the area that can be disturbed to 20,000 square feet. New homes that fall below the threshold would be charged a $5,000 stormwater permit fee.

The town also would reduce its stream buffers to 50 feet required under the Jordan Lake rules.

A second community meeting could be held in January. A public hearing on the changes is tentatively scheduled for Feb. 18.

Popularity of green houses growing in Triangle

This house at 208 Regiment Way in Durham has energy-efficient features. Staff photo by John Rottet.

At first glance, this house seems like so many of the other homes built in the Triangle this decade.

That's kind of the point, according to Steve Frasher, co-owner and manager of NCGreenBuild. But looks can deceive, because this home is loaded with enough green construction tactics to earn a LEED certification.

From the earliest studs to the final landscaping decisions, Frasher tells features editor Carole Miller about all of the touches that add up to an environmentally friendly home. Frasher says the house cost about 6 percent more than a new construction without these features.

If you're not in the market for a new home, don't miss all the tips and links with this article that you can use to make your residence a little more green.

More home and garden stories publish every Saturday in The News & Observer and online at newsobserver.com/life/home_garden

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