Menu Close

Radcliff council denies Redmar zoning request, approves annexation

The Radcliff City Council met for a regular meeting Tuesday.

The council voted to uphold the Radcliff Planning Commission’s denial of a zoning map amendment for four properties at or near the intersection of Wingard Drive and Redmar Lane in the Redmar Subdivision from R-1 to R-4. Council member Jerry Brown said that Radcliff is a relatively young city in one of Kentucky’s oldest counties, and it is important to preserve the city’s history when possible.

“There is so little of valid historical significance, but this area, this community that these homeowners are discussing, is probably the only valid historical area in town,” Brown said.

The council did approve on second reading ordinances that annexed a property on the east side of Bullion Boulevard between Safari Trail and Oakland Circle and a property at 691 Safari Trail from the city of Vine Grove and rezoned both properties from R-1 to R-3.

An ordinance establishing an Energy Project Assessment District program was also approved on its second reading.

“By establishing an EPAD program, pursuant to the EPAD Act, eligible property owners will be eligible to finance qualifying energy projects to their properties through the imposition of assessments on their approved real property within the city,” said City Attorney Michael Pike, reading from the ordinance.

The council received an update on the Green Dot program, a violence prevention program that trains schools and businesses while promoting bystander intervention. Leadership Hardin County, Silverleaf, and the city council partnered to implement the program, and to promote it a mural was commissioned to be designed by the North Hardin High School art class, with the winning design submitted by recent grad Megan McNight.

“We wanted to resemble a breaking away of all of this negative energy, all these bad things that could be happening like bullying, just getting away from all of that, and then behind it is something beautiful where it’s just like a calm scene,” McNight said.

A location for the mural is being discussed.

The Radcliff City Council will next meet in a work session on September 12 and a regular meeting on September 19.

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *