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50-Year Development Agreement & Fiscal Review

Documents related to the proposed long-term development agreement, including:

  • Duration and binding terms

  • Vesting provisions

  • Infrastructure obligations

  • Fiscal allocation and cost exposure

  • Amendment and enforcement mechanisms

These agreements can shape municipal authority and financial obligations for decades once executed.

Groundwater & Drinking Water Reliance

Records and assessments related to:

  • Regional groundwater sourcing

  • Municipal and private utility capacity

  • System expansion planning

  • Well proximity and water treatment considerations

Water capacity decisions made today affect existing neighborhoods and long-term service reliability.

Known & Legacy Contamination Sites

Publicly documented contamination sites within or near the proposed annexation area, including:

  • Camp Davis PRLF landfill

  • Camp Davis Site 111 (PFAS area)

  • Highway 50 Superfund site

  • Renroh Superfund site

  • Bostic site (DNT storage history)

  • Camp Davis weapons range area

Two of these sites are listed under the EPA Superfund program.
All references are drawn from public environmental records.

Fiscal Impact Analysis

Independent financial modeling shows the proposed annexation may create a long-term structural cost burden on the Town, with projected service costs exceeding projected tax revenue under current assumptions.

Groundwater & Drinking Water Review

The annexation area lies near documented contamination sites and within a federal PFAS investigation zone. No annexation-footprint-specific groundwater testing has been publicly presented to confirm site-specific safety conditions.

Development Agreement Review

The proposed agreement would establish long-term regulatory conditions lasting up to 50 years, extending beyond typical planning cycles and potentially limiting future governance flexibility.

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Reports & Documents

Purpose of This Document Library

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SafeHollyRidge.org compiles publicly filed records related to the proposed annexation, 50-year development agreement, groundwater sourcing, and documented contamination sites.

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These materials come from official filings, municipal records, and state or federal agency sources.


They allow residents to evaluate what is being approved — and what may be difficult to change later.

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