SMITHFIELD -- The Smithfield Town Council was briefly at a loss for
action Tuesday night on a controversial plan to expand its planning
jurisdiction to two miles beyond the town limits.With Bill Jordan dissenting, the council voted 6-1 to expand the
extraterritorial jurisdiction, or ETJ, to two miles from one. The move
gives the town planning and zoning authority in the broader area beyond
its borders. Unlike in an annexation, residents won’t receive most town
services or pay its taxes.A standing-room-only crowd of affected property owners filled the
council chambers for a public hearing on the proposal, and of the 20
people who spoke, none supported the move. Many were concerned about
how the move might affect the future of their farms, and others saw
annexation of their land on the horizon.“This change is actually one of the steps in annexation,” said Joseph
Avery, who lives on Barbour Road west of Smithfield, where he said his
ancestors once worked the land as slaves. “We don’t want to be annexed
-- next month, next year or in five years.”Town officials downplayed the annexation concern.“It may never be taxed; it may never be annexed,” Town Attorney Bob
Spence Jr. said, eliciting mutters of disbelief from the crowd.Read more in next week’s edition of The Herald.





