Spring Newsletter 2015
Transcription
Spring Newsletter 2015
Kestrel Landing Strip Singing Hills-The Build Begins Spring 2015 Volume 4, Issue 1 Reporter: Emily Sutter Design: Joyce Allen Singing Hill development viewed from south looking north After months of seeing the hillsides planed, pipes and poles planted, and yellow machines of every description busily doing their thing in the dirt, at last we are seeing the walls for Walmart arise. Walmart is the main anchor store for the 250acre mixed commercial/residential Singing Hills development on our southern border. Billed as a “Service Center” it will focus on businesses that offer basic services to local residents such as restaurants, medical, money management, car services, etc. N o w t h a t Wa l m a r t i s u n d e r construction and scheduled for opening in September of this year, other entities have begun to commit. Todd Gold of REOC, the developers of Singing Hills, has confirmed that Whataburger, Popeyes, and Discount Tire have committed to be in the project, but he could not yet comment on any other potential businesses. While completely unconfirmed, but elsewhere rumored, the following may be looking into a Singing Hills location: Burger King, Taco Bell, Chick-fil-A, Jiffy Lube, Mattress Firm and Security Service (Federal Credit Union). There was some chance that Academy might locate in Singing Hills, but apparently they cannot wait long enough for the building to be completed and Petco may now be looking at that spot. Some 3 companies are looking at the multi-screen movie theatre and several hotels are interested in the planned 80-room extended-stay hotel. However, there are no takers so far for the 160-unit apartment building. Palladium (USA) International, who had been courted by the Bulverde Chamber of Commerce, opted for a different geographical location and withdrew its proposal. The apartment unit is projected for construction in 2016 for opening in 2017. Page 1 Inside this issue: Singing Hills-The Build Begins 1-2 Calendar of Events 2 Neighborhood News 3-6 Master Plan 7 Resident Spotlight 8 KAPRA “Strat. Plan” 9 Have suggestions or items for the newsletter? Contact Emily Sutter Looking for a back issue? They are all on our web site. www.kestrelairpark.com Singing Hills- The Build Begins (cont.) Site drawing of Singing Hills Development Of particular interest is the office complex planned for the area now being cleared just opposite Kestrel’s runway. Those offices are rumored to be of a medical focus: urgent care, skilled nursing facilities, dental and medical doctors’ offices. Some 30 business pads are planned for the commercial section, which will run along U.S. Hwy 281 and a short distance west on Hwy 46 (see site drawing taken from the Singing Hill website, www.singinghillstx.com). Pad site construction is slated to begin late this spring with the first inline retail spaces ready for occupancy by mid-summer. Roads in the project are expected to be open this summer as well. The 120 acres devoted to residential lots will be under construction after the commercial part is operational. The estimated 350 lots mean each acre will contain an average of 3 homes. Lots are approximately 60 x 100 to 120. Homes are estimated to average $350,000 to $400,000. Builders have already been selected. They are the Jeffrey Harrison Homes Division of Armadillo and Ashton Woods. The first homes are expected to be constructed by (are you ready for this?) October of this year. Happy New Year! Calendar of Events Date/Time Tue. Feb. 17, 6:00 PM Fri. Feb. 27, 5:00 PM Sun. Mar. 8, 2:00 AM Fri. Mar. 16-Mon. Mar 20 Fri. Mar. 20 Sat. April 11, 10:30 AM Sat. April 18, 9:00 AM Sat. April 25, 10:30 AM Description Location KAPRA BOD meeting Kestrel FBO Unit 1 POA Dues Due Barbara’s Bookkeeping Daylight Savings begins – “spring forward” Spring Break Comal ISD Probable last freeze 78070 Unit 1 POA Meeting BSB Library Clean-Up Day Kestrel Entrance KAPRA Meeting BSB Library Page 2 Neighborhood News Halloween Party Success. Earlier than usual this year, October 25, residents and extended family members gathered in the Creek Landing cul-de-sac for a spread of Mexican food, visiting for the adults and a “Bouncy” for the kids. Gail Digman and Terry Deardurff coordinated the event with the help of the social committee. The hay wagons toured the neighborhood afterward for the children to fill their “trick or treat” bags. The Lively Family Bouncy Fun New Holiday Decorations. Misty Blocker unveiled new lights, garlands and wreaths for the season this year as residents turned out for the decorating and undecorating days. The old decorations were very shop-worn and badly needed replacing. Some of the lights may remain up all year to brighten our entry. Jim Ferguson and Connie White Kestrel’s Entrance Charity Abounds. Holiday giving occurred in many forms this year, but special note was made of the Quilting Bee project, baking 75 bags of assorted cookies (450 cookies in all) for senior citizens that receive assistance through the Hope Center Food Pantry on US Hwy 281. The Quilting Bee ladies also donated blankets to the Provision Food Pantry in downtown Bulverde. Kestrel Quilting Bee Hannah Dances her Dream. Hannah Koop, a senior at Smithson Valley High School was accepted as a member of the newly formed Valley Girls JV Dance Team. The dance team performs at all home JV football games as well as home Varsity football games. The springtime is filled with competition season. While she is currently on homebound status due to illness, being on the dance team was a huge accomplishment for her! It has always been a dream of hers to dance on the SV Football field. Hannah's parents say that by the grace of God, her dream finally came true this year! It’s a memory that will never be forgotten by her or her parents. Hannah Koop and Rachael Deardurff Page 3 Neighborhood News (cont.) Nolan Blank Nolan Blank Passes. This past winter Rev. Nolan D. Blank, an 8-year resident of Kestrel, joined the Lord he served since the age of 20. According to wife, Willie, Nolan's accomplishments could fill a book. He received his Master's in business (MBA) weeks before his 60th birthday. He was a Navy veteran from the Korean war, a pilot, ski instructor for handicapped, interim pastor, minister of music, Karate Green Belt, college Associate Professor, pyrotechnic specialist for the space shuttle program and many more. He had a beautiful voice and his favorite activity was singing gospel songs. Those who knew him enjoyed his encouraging, tolerant and positive outlook on life and his love of his family. He loved Kestrel and would want to say "Thank You" to each that helped him through the past two years of declining health. Hangar Lot Sold. Our own Unit 1 residents, Doug and Lisa Hooker, are the new owners of the Hangar Lot in Unit 2. They purchased the lot from original owner, Casey Rubey, this past fall. In addition to the FBO, the lot contains 41 hangars (24 rental and 17 owned). Doug plans to add a block of 10 additional hangars shortly. He hopes to energize the services offered at the lot, starting with a complete refurbishing of the FBO – new paint, plumbing, furniture, fireplace, TV and Wi-Fi. Of the 13 lots in Unit 2, the Hangar Lot is the largest at 8 acres, carrying 8 votes. To learn more about Unit 2, see the summer, 2014, issue of the newsletter, available on the Kestrel website. Doug Hooker at the FBO Never Too Late To Learn. Hats off to Vic White who is about to begin the 3rd career of his lifetime. An aviator all his life, Vic obtained his BS from Texas A&M in Aerospace Engineering and an MS from Embry-Riddle in Aeronautical Science & Technology. Retiring after 26 years in the Air Force, Vic went on to become a Project Manager with Global Rail Systems, managing the installation of computerized railroad switch-control systems. But he has always enjoyed working on his 1946 Cessna 140 and dreamed of restoring antique airplanes. To make that dream a reality he has now completed an Associates Degree program in Aircraft Technology, earning his Airframe & Powerplant license this month. He will be working in Bulverde at Julicher Aviation. Way to go, Vic! Vic White with A&P license Page 4 Neighborhood News (cont.) Georges Return from Abroad. Work took Bruce George to the Netherlands for several months this past fall. While there he and wife, Kerri, took full advantage of visiting the countryside, such as a little country town north of Amsterdam called Zaanse Schans. The whole town smelled like hot chocolate because of a Dutch chocolate factory down the road. The winds blow through town 24/7. They took another bus south toward Delft and toured the De Delftse Pauw blue pottery factory. On the weekends, they were able to take trips to Bruges, Belgium, Cologne, Germany and Paris, France, etc. The trip back to Amsterdam from Paris was only about 3 hours by the high speed Thalys train. Bruce found that his co-workers in Europe do not have a grasp of how big Texas really is since they can visit several countries in three hours time. It was getting pretty cold the first two weeks of December in Amsterdam so Bruce and Kerri were more than ready to return to Spring Branch. They would love to go back in the spring some year to visit the tulip fields in bloom. Bruce and Kerri George Dear, Dear, More Deer. The deer population is growing. The reasons vary but there is no question the herd numbers have increased over the past couple of years and the danger to our pilots is escalating. There have been three documented near misses over the holidays. At least two distinct herds have been routinely spotted roaming through Kestrel, usually crossing the runway from north to south. They have become so bold, they graze along the side of the runway, usually at dawn and dusk. Approaching planes get the “deer in the headlights” look and in one recent case it took a honking truck to move them off the runway. A deer strike by a landing aircraft can mean injuries or death for pilot and passengers. At the very least, please do not feed the deer or otherwise encourage their overpopulation here at the air park. There is proof of increasing danger to our pilots. Board Nominees Needed. The terms of two members of the Unit 1 Board of Directors will be completed with the semi-annual Property Owners Association (POA) meeting April 11. Board members serve three-year terms and meet bimonthly to handle the business of the POA. Rotating off the board will be Wade Lively and Brian Lloyd. Those remaining on the board are Misty Blocker, Mari Brown and Bob Monetti. Chuck Luther has been appointed chair of the nominations committee to find potential nominees to fill the two open positions. If you, or someone you know would be a good candidate for a board position, please contact Chuck. More information on the nomination process will be emailed shortly. Chuck Luther Neighborhood News (cont.) Simulator Offer. Brian Lloyd is making a very generous offer to Kestrel residents. He has purchased a TouchTrainer flight simulator from FlyThisSim. It is considered to be a Basic Air Training Device (BATD), which means pilots may use it to log time toward an instrument rating and may use it to maintain IFR currency and meet the FAA requirements. This is much less expensive than flying even the simplest airplane. Brian’s offer to Kestrel neighbors is to come over and try out the simulator (and get IFR current) to see how they like it (no charge). It is equipped with all the different aircraft simulations that FTS offers, including Beechcraft Bonanza and Baron; Cessna 172, 182, and 206; Piper Cherokee, Warrior, Archer, Arrow, Malibu, and Seneca, the Diamond aircraft, and all the Cirrus aircraft. Most of the aircraft have simulations for most different panels including G1000, G500, Aspen, and older "steam" gauges. Thanks, Brian! Brian Lloyd Walgreens. It’s hard to imagine how a big building can be constructed on the steep hillside at the entrance to Windmill Ranch across from HEB. Yet that’s where the future Walgreens will sit on a gigantic concrete slab. Manny Garcia, the construction Superintendent, says the 14,000 square foot store should be open by this fall. That will give us four drug stores in the immediate area with HEB, CVS, Walgreens, and the Walmart under construction. Post Office Site Selected. In the summer newsletter we noted that the Postal Service had narrowed their search for a new site to 5 locations, 4 of them close to us and 1 to the north of the present site. Did you bet money on this one? They picked the site furthest from us. It’s at 12,111 U.S. Hwy 281 at the Blazing Meadows intersection. That’s 1 mile north of the present post office and 7 miles north of Kestrel. Now bids will be requested to build. We’ll keep you posted (no pun intended). Page 6 4S Ranch Coming. Last spring’s newsletter profiled 6 new developments coming to our area (the 7th being Singing Hills, on our doorstep). Now we learn of another development coming, even larger than Johnson Ranch. 4S Ranch is approximately 780 acres located in the Bulverde ETJ, less than a mile east of US Highway 281 on Smithson Valley Road (approximately one mile of frontage) and Stahl Road (approximately 1⁄2 mile of frontage.) The Master Plan is for 1,800 singlefamily lots, averaging 2.31 lots/acre. There are also plans for a school, a church site, and a 360unit apartment. “Meaningful Changes” Coming to Master Plan This 2nd. draft was presented to the membership last year in 2 forms, DRAFT 2.0 showed all the changes with explanations and DRAFT 2.1 showed this more readable document “cleanedup” with all changes incorporated. No substantive changes in meaning were made with this second draft. Committee consults with Doug Koop of the ACC Finally! It’s the beginning of the end. Having worked diligently for the past 3 years, first on the Unit 1 By-laws and now the Master Plan and CC&Rs (Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions), the committee is moving into what it hopes will be the final draft. Our original Master Plan and CC&Rs were set down by Kestrel’s developer, Scott Knowlton, over 16 years ago before anything but a runway existed on the property. It established the rules by which Mr. Knowlton envisioned Kestrel would operate. MUCH has changed since then and Kestrel’s Master Plan and CC&Rs badly need updating. The committee began by translating the documents into Word format so they could be edited (DRAFT 1). Then the 6 Amendments were incorporated into the document, the exhibits and attachments condensed, redundant material removed, illegal material updated to reflect current law, and paragraphs reordered and labeled where needed for better readability. Page 7 Throughout the process, the committee meetings have been open to the membership and meeting summaries posted on the Kestrel web under the Notices section. Every effort is being made to keep this process transparent and open to feedback! This is especially important as DRAFT 3 begins to make meaningful, substantive changes to the document. What changes would you like in the Master Plan or CC&Rs? Haven’t read them? Take a look at DRAFT 2.1 on the Kestrel Website (www.kestrelairpark.com) under the Master Plan Committee menu item. Better yet, wait for DRAFT 3.0, which should be coming to you by email very shortly. It will take a 60% approval vote of BOTH Unit 1 and 2 to pass a new version of the Master Plan and CC&Rs. That means all changes put before the lot owners must have 60% approval, so highly controversial changes will NOT likely be proposed by the committee. The committee must know what you want and don’t want. All changes will be proposed to lot owners in several ways: website, email, meetings, and special interactive sites. All committee members seek and are available to hear your opinions. Committee members are Wade Lively (Chair), Willie Blank, Brian Lloyd, Chuck Luther, Cliff McFarlane, Emily Sutter and Connie White. Please, let your voice be heard in this important matter! Resident Spotlight Mike and Sheridan Buck Sheridan, Mike, Caroline and Woody Kestrel welcomes another pilot and family. Mike and Sheridan Buck bought the Armen’s former home on Flightline, selling the Kestrel lot they owned previously just north of their current house. The Bucks began looking for places to retire some time ago, talking with friends around the country. Then Mike saw an aerial view of Kestrel in a YouTube video and the rest is history. Mike even showed his military friend, John DelToro, what he found in Kestrel and, as we know, General DelToro purchased the first house on the left coming up Flightline (see Resident Spotlight in the Summer, 2013 newsletter on the Kestrel website). The San Antonio area is not entirely new to the Bucks. They lived here 25 years ago when Mike was assigned to Randolph AFB. Their oldest child, Michael, was born here. Michael is now a Korean Language Specialist with the Army, living in Korea. San Antonio remained high on the Buck’s list of places to retire, although retirement is not yet in the cards for Page 8 either parent. Mike is currently with United Airlines, a First Officer and Flight Instructor on the Boeing 777. He retired from the Air Force some 3 years ago after a 28-year career. During much of this time Sheridan was an Air Force wife and mother. Caroline, their middle child, just completed her bachelor’s degree at Wilmington University in Delaware. She is pursuing a commission in the Air Force Reserve at Kelly AFB while studying for her master’s degree at UTSA. Caroline is living here during this process, helping with the house and the pets (a Dachshund named Bandit and a Rat Terrier named Chico). Youngest child, son Woody, is a Midshipman at the US Merchant Marine Academy in Long Island, NY, who will graduate in 2016 then perhaps consider a Navy commission. Mike is no longer moving around with the Air Force and the children are mostly independent, so Sheridan has been spreading her wings for the past several years. She is interested and involved in politics. A long-time volunteer worker with the Republican Central Committee in her local Montana county, Sheridan ran for state Senator recently. She said she did not win, but the race was quite a learning experience. (Clearly, a potential future POA Board Member has just moved into the neighborhood!) Sheridan still resides in Montana due to her various activities and responsibilities there. It will be sometime before we see her on an extended basis. This delightful family is a wonderful fit for Kestrel and we look forward to welcoming them into our community. KAPRA “Strat. Plans” Last year the Kestrel Air Park Runway Association (KAPRA) got serious about its financial situation. Without concrete and strategic plans (Strat Plans), current dues would not cover future expenses. At its February, 2014, meeting several means were proposed to help ensure a viable air park for the next 15-20 years. At present KAPRA has 25 mandatory members in Unit 1 (i.e. homes on the runway), 9.5 mandatory members in Unit 2, and 4 voluntary members. Dues were raised from $275 to $300 for 2014. Then a onetime special assessment of $180/mandatory member was approved to pay for immediate crack sealing. And finally, a $10/month runway/taxiway usage fee was proposed for each aircraft hangared or tied-down in the commercial area and each hangar in the residential area (covering about 65 aircraft at present). These usage fees will be placed in a reserve fund to be used exclusively to maintain/repair/replace runway and taxiway pavement. An amendment to the Master Plan to provide for this usage fee went to Kestrel voters at the POA meeting in October, 2014 and passed. KAPRA’s semi-annual fall gathering in November (re-convened December 13, 2014 due to lack of quorum) discussed and approved a proposed budget, based on the above new fees. Every effort is being made to hold down costs of maintaining the airpark. For instance, KAPRA members have volunteered to cut the grass rather than paying for this service, which can amount to $3,600 for peak season mowing alone. Brian Lloyd has replaced the runway lights at his own expense and Mike Foster has volunteered his time and equipment with earth-moving projects. While electric, legal, office and insurance expenses run up to $3,000/year, the big expense is routine preventive maintenance on the runway and taxiways. This filling and sealing runway pavement cracks with tar, applying a sealcoat finish to the whole pavement surface and repainting runway markings needs to be done every Page 9 5 to 7 years at a cost of approximately $38 thousand dollars. An aggressive runway/taxiway maintenance program will extend the life of the pavement but eventually the pavement will need to be replaced and that cost will likely exceed $300K. While trucks used in construction of homes and hangars are NOT to use the taxiways, they have and this has caused extra damage, wear and tear. Fortunately, Kestel is mostly built-out at this point. Use of the runway and taxiways came under discussion at the fall meeting(s) and remains a continuing concern. Residents need to let visitors know to use Flightline Drive and not the taxiways to drive into the subdivision. The airpark is NOT a green belt and poses a risk if anything or anyone other than planes accesses this area. The pilots recount near misses all too frequently. Use of additional signage at strategic points is being considered to keep the area safe and installation of the second gate should help the situation at night. At the November meeting the use of rotary aircraft and the practice of “touch and go” exercises also came under discussion. Committees are being formed to address these and other operational concerns (such as the recent proliferation of drone incursions at airfields). As KAPRA grapples with operational issues, Chuck Luther is proposing a Strategic Plan with goals and objectives to guide the organization into the future. Wade Lively also reminded the group that the Master Plan and CC&Rs are being revised and input from the group is desired. The work of Wade’s committee is posted on the Kestrel web and DRAFT 3.0 will soon be available by email. Kestrel is an airpark and KAPRA is to be commended for taking responsibility for the current and future viability of our main reason for being! Special thanks to KAPRA’s President, Rick Kelley and the Board of Directors: John Allen, Doug Hooker, Chuck Luther, Tom Puglise and Gary Watson.