The following comment to the article on the Cape Charles Connector Road: “This road is not a subdivision street. Its need is generated by the need of the general public; not the Bay Creek subdivision. It is appropriate for the State to expend state funds to construct it. Right of way was dedicated for the road; presumably without compensation.
What is the end game? To reimburse the State for its construction? If it was, indeed, the responsibility of the subdivider, wouldn’t it have been “bonded” like other public improvements” , generated the following response and letter from a Cape Charles Mirror reader:
Reading the comment, it seems Mr. Taylor does not have his facts straight. He notes:
“This road is not a subdivision street. Its need is generated by the need of the general public; not the Bay Creek subdivision”. However, Taylor misses the point that the Town determined it needed a ‘connector road’ to provide ingress and egress away from limited town access roads that is why the Schedule of Road Improvement was included in the Court Order for Annexation – did Taylor miss this critical point or just ignore it?
He also states that “It is appropriate for the State to expend state funds to construct it. Right of way was dedicated for the road; presumably without compensation”. The Right of Way was paid for by VDOT.
Mr. Taylor goes on to say, “What is the end game? To reimburse the State for its construction? If it was, indeed, the responsibility of the subdivider, wouldn’t it have been “bonded” like other public improvements.”
Taylor is wrong again. The Subdivider would not have needed to secure any bonds as per state code § 2.2-4337. Performance and payment bonds:
A. Except as provided in subsection H, upon the award of any (i) public construction contract exceeding $500,000 awarded to any prime contractor; (ii) construction contract exceeding $500,000 awarded to any prime contractor requiring the performance of labor or the furnishing of materials for buildings, structures or other improvements to real property owned or leased by a public body; (iii) construction contract exceeding $500,000 in which the performance of labor or the furnishing of materials will be paid with public funds; or (iv) transportation-related projects exceeding $350,000 that are partially or wholly funded by the Commonwealth, the contractor shall furnish to the public body the following bonds:
1. A performance bond in the sum of the contract amount conditioned upon the faithful performance of the contract in strict conformity with the plans, specifications and conditions of the contract. For transportation-related projects authorized under Article 2 (§ 33.2-208 et seq.) of Chapter 2 of Title 33.2, such bond shall be in a form and amount satisfactory to the public body.
2. A payment bond in the sum of the contract amount. The bond shall be for the protection of claimants who have and fulfill contracts to supply labor or materials to the prime contractor to whom the contract was awarded, or to any subcontractors, in furtherance of the work provided for in the contract, and shall be conditioned upon the prompt payment for all materials furnished or labor supplied or performed in the furtherance of the work. For transportation-related projects authorized under Article 2 (§ 33.2-208 et seq.) of Chapter 2 of Title 33.2 and partially or wholly funded by the Commonwealth, such bond shall be in a form and amount satisfactory to the public body.
As used in this subdivision, “labor or materials” includes public utility services and reasonable rentals of equipment, but only for periods when the equipment rented is actually used at the site.
B. For nontransportation-related construction contracts in excess of $100,000 but less than $500,000, where the performance and payment bond requirements are waived, prospective contractors shall be prequalified for each individual project in accordance with § 2.2-4317. However, a locality may waive the requirement for prequalification of a contractor with a current Class A contractor license for contracts in excess of $100,000 but less than $300,000 upon a written determination made in advance by the local governing body that waiving the requirement is in the best interests of the locality. A locality shall not enter into more than 10 such contracts per year.
C. Each of the bonds shall be executed by one or more surety companies selected by the contractor that are authorized to do business in Virginia.
D. If the public body is the Commonwealth, or any agency or institution thereof, the bonds shall be payable to the Commonwealth of Virginia, naming also the agency or institution thereof. Bonds required for the contracts of other public bodies shall be payable to such public body.
E. Each of the bonds shall be filed with the public body that awarded the contract, or a designated office or official thereof.
F. Nothing in this section shall preclude a public body from requiring payment or performance bonds for construction contracts below $500,000 for nontransportation-related projects or $350,000 for transportation-related projects authorized under Article 2 (§ 33.2-208 et seq.) of Chapter 2 of Title 33.2 and partially or wholly funded by the Commonwealth.
G. Nothing in this section shall preclude the contractor from requiring each subcontractor to furnish a payment bond with surety thereon in the sum of the full amount of the contract with such subcontractor conditioned upon the payment to all persons who have and fulfill contracts that are directly with the subcontractor for performing labor and furnishing materials in the prosecution of the work provided for in the subcontract.
H. The performance and payment bond requirements of subsection A for transportation-related projects that are valued in excess of $250,000 but less than $350,000 may only be waived by a public body if the bidder provides evidence, satisfactory to the public body, that a surety company has declined an application from the contractor for a performance or payment bond.
Here is the missing link that the Town overlooks and the County hides from and perhaps misleads the VDOT and taxpayers.
More details on the Agreement
While the letter writer is correct in their assertions, again it should be understood that the Annexation Agreements (the Prior Agreement, March 1990, before the Annexation Petition was submitted), the Town Agreement of November 25, 1991 and the Annexation Agreement (the Settlement Agreement, November 25, 1991) include the following negotiations that led to the following:.
1. The town would get a new upgraded and in-compliance water and wastewater treatment plant
2. The Town would receive certain cash payments
3. The Town would get a new revenue/taxing base
4. The Town would get a simultaneous development of the North Tract (existing town environs) with the development of the South Tract
5. The Town would get a ‘connector road’ to move traffic into Bay Creek South away from the Town’s limited access routes
6. The Town would get Fig Street extended
7. The Town would get a replaced Kings Creek Marina
8. The Town would get a new Water Tower
9. The Town would get a ‘welcome center’
That is why the negotiations resulted in the Annexation Agreement (Settlement Agreement), the Agreement (Town Agreement). The Commission on Local Government issued its February 1991 Report 11 months before the Annexation Order.
In the Commission on Local Government report – Page 18 notes that Routes 641 & 642 connects because of the “Connector Road”. Which the Commission (The Commission acts on behalf of the State legislature and follows prescribed procedures laid out in Virginia statutes) wanted addressed, and was so addressed in the Annexation Agreement on November 25, 1991.
Bay Creek had its engineers develop a Master Plan 2003 (see image below) which for the first time showed the ‘connector road’. Bay Creek submitted many updated Master Plans since the original one submitted by Brown & Root and Baymark in 1998 as part of the sale agreement between those parties. Why would Bay Creek spend its money to show a ‘connector road’ on its maps submitted to the Town if this was a State problem?
Clearly Rts 641 & 642 are shown and the connector road cutting across the Martin parcel, which Bay Creek purchased for the purpose of building the required ‘connector road’, or the State would have paid for the Martin parcel. The Bay Creek POA sold some of its property to the State for the right-of-way, as did Bay Creek South (Keyser-Sinclair).
Footnotes from Pages 18 & 19 of the Report offer more details
See Footnotes:( Footnote 49- 0f the 3,000 dwelling units planned for construction in the Accawmacke Plantation, approximately 2,500 will be built in the area proposed for annexation. (Davis, letter to staff of Commission on Local Government, Oct. 16, 1990.)
Footnote 50Ibid. Brown & Root projects that only approximately 40% of the property owners in the Accawmacke Plantation development will be permanent residents.
Footnote 51Ibid. Brown & Root estimates that, based on studies of similar resort/second home developments, only 80-160 students will reside within the proposed Accawmacke Plantation development when completed. Those additional students would represent approximately 3 to 6% of the 1989 average daily membership of the County’s school system
Page 18 – The proposed Accawmacke Plantation will result in the construction ‘of approximately 3,000 single-family and multifamily dwelling units. (Footnote 49)
That planned community, when completed, is expected to provide housing to approximately 2,800 full-time and 4,200 seasonal residents who will be eligible for educational, health, and
social services from the County. (Footnote 50)
However, given the anticipated nature of the residents who will be principally attracted to the planned residential community, the cost to the County for the provision of such
services should be fully offset by its receipt of increased property tax revenue. Footnote 51
There is, however, one other functional area in which the prospective impact of the proposed annexation on the County merits comment. While the proposed annexation would result in the entire
Accawmacke Plantation being brought within the corporate boundaries of the Town and subject to the zoning and other regulatory authority of that municipality, the physical impact of that development will affect the County. In particular, certain public thoroughfares in the Cape Charles area (including State Routes 641 and 642), will require substantial improvement to serve the vehicular needs of an additional 7,000 persons. Unless offset by developer contributions, improvements to public thoroughfares throughout Northampton County (including those with in the (Page 19))
Town of Cape Charles} are funded from an allocation of State funds dedicated for such use in Northampton County.52 As a consequence, any expenditure of State funds for road improvements to serve the Accawmacke Plantation will have the effect of “reducing the amount of State aid available to address other significant road problems in the County. (Footnote 53)
Moreover, it should be noted that the present condition of the State’s economy and the Commonwealth’s budgetary concerns may even result in a reduction in the amount of State road construction money:projected to be available for use in Northampton County during the current planning period. (Footnote 54) In these circumstances, the prospective impact of the proposed annexation on the County’s ability to address its road concerns requires recognition.
A clear reading of the Commission’s Report, the Annexation Order and the Annexation Agreement, identifies Brown & Root (Keyser-Sinclair who agreed to accept these Agreement conditions when it purchased the controlling interest of Bay Creek South, LLC in March 2008 and the remainder of the South Tract properties in May 2014), as fully responsible to construct the ‘connector road’.
David Gay says
What is wrong with spreading the cost across all the taxpayers of Virginia. Why do we want to punish our local community!
Note: There is actually quite a bit wrong with this, unless you disapprove of state laws, and instead approve of corruption, collusion and fraud. As for spreading the cost, VDOT has had to forgo other projects in Northampton, because $12 million is being misappropriated for the connector road.
Charles Taylor says
The editor’s note is compelling, but somewhat misapplied. The bonding provisions cited pertain to work contracted to the Commonwealth of Virginia–not subdivision improvements which are constructed to County and State standards and turned over to VDOT for maintenance . The point of this writer’s earlier comment was that if it was the latter, it would have been a bonded improvement of the Bay Creek subdivision and a bond would be required.
Code Section 15.2-2241 provides for such bonds:
4. For the extent to which and the manner in which streets shall be graded, graveled or otherwise improved and water and storm and sanitary sewer and other public utilities or other community facilities are to be installed;
5. For the acceptance of dedication for public use of any right-of-way located within any subdivision or section thereof, which has constructed or proposed to be constructed within the subdivision or section thereof, any street, curb, gutter, sidewalk, bicycle trail, drainage or sewerage system, waterline as part of a public system or other improvement dedicated for public use, and maintained by the locality, the Commonwealth, or other public agency, and for the provision of other site-related improvements required by local ordinances for vehicular ingress and egress, including traffic signalization and control, for public access streets, for structures necessary to ensure stability of critical slopes, and for storm water management facilities, financed or to be financed in whole or in part by private funds only if the owner or developer (i) certifies to the governing body that the construction costs have been paid to the person constructing such facilities or, at the option of the local governing body, presents evidence satisfactory to the governing body that the time for recordation of any mechanics lien has expired or evidence that any debt for said construction that may be due and owing is contested and further provides indemnity with adequate surety in an amount deemed sufficient by the governing body or its designated administrative agency; (ii) furnishes to the governing body a certified check or cash escrow in the amount of the estimated costs of construction or a personal, corporate or property bond, with surety satisfactory to the governing body or its designated administrative agency, in an amount sufficient for and conditioned upon the construction of such facilities, or a contract for the construction of such facilities and the contractor’s bond, with like surety, in like amount and so conditioned; or (iii) furnishes to the governing body a bank or savings institution’s letter of credit on certain designated funds satisfactory to the governing body or its designated administrative agency as to the bank or savings institution, the amount and the form. The amount of such certified check, cash escrow, bond, or letter of credit shall not exceed the total of the estimated cost of construction based on unit prices for new public or private sector construction in the locality and a reasonable allowance for estimated administrative costs, inflation, and potential damage to existing roads or utilities, which shall not exceed 10 percent of the estimated construction costs. If the owner or developer defaults on construction of such facilities, and such facilities are constructed by the surety or with funding from the aforesaid check, cash escrow, bond or letter of credit, the locality shall be entitled to retain or collect the allowance for administrative costs to the extent the costs of such construction do not exceed the total of the originally estimated costs of construction and the allowance for administrative costs. “Such facilities,” as used in this section, means those facilities specifically provided for in this section.
The absence of the bond noted above leads to the conclusion that the road was not a subdivision road.
RICHARD M LEAL says
Bay Shore Concrete must be Laughing all the way to the Bank. Citizen of Cape Charles & Virginia Just gave them a beautiful Road which will enhance the sale of their property. They can now run Larger 18 wheel trucks and miss the turn at the Cemetery. This project is so far behind schedule it is a joke. I would suggest that the town manager and Mayor take a ride up to VDOT and raze Holy Hell.
B. Taylor says
BINGO! And Northampton County was duped! No new roads for 10 years…..what a SCAM.