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State Board of Forestry is moving Tuolumne County towards a “No Build” Community
The State Board of Forestry decided to move the March 15, 2021 draft of Revised State Fire Safe Regulations ahead, without revision, into a 45-day public comment period, ultimately intending to adopt them as State law. This will dictate oppressive requirements for development and construction in our county. Within high fire zones (which the majority of our county and rural California fall under), if any type of building permit is taken out, the landowner would be required to bring roads up to modern standards all the way from their property out to the next fully-conforming collector road. This would be unattainable for most folks as the costs would be astronomical. Numerous parcels would instantly be (administratively) undevelopable, and therefore instantly worthless. In March, our Board sent a letter of opposition to the Board of Forestry (https://legistarweb-production.s3.amazonaws.com/u
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There’s a total of $11.2 billion for Ohio in the bill called the American Rescue Plan – half of it going to the state, with $2.2 billion each going to major cities and to all 88 counties.
Of that total, Franklin County gets $255 million, Cuyahoga County will get a little less – around $239 million. Hamilton County will get $158 million, Summit County just under $105 million, and Montgomery County rounds out the top five with $103 million.
Among major cities, Cleveland gets the most, almost a half a billion dollars – which averages out to $1,400 per resident. Cincinnati could get around $967 per person. And because Columbus is by far the largest city by population, its take comes out to $211 per resident.