dcyrilc
Elite Member
Some balance is required. I should have reasonable use of my property and it is wrong to require me to leave vacant a part of my property in order to fulfill some other group's desire for open space (without compensation) But should I be allowed to run a junk yard on my 1/2 acre neighborhood lot?
Mike
Now we're talking about zoning. Again a good thing, but limits need to be observed. The 'balance' you spoke about.
I'm sure zoning plays a part into what I dealt with as 15+ years ago, we were changed from farm/ag to residentual zoning. As we are now surrounded by residentual, I'm sure the county would love to be able to make us close the farm. It doesn't meet their long term objectives for this area and with the current public push for open spaces, I can understand it. Still doesn't make it right. The thing I find funny about it, is that the county publically (on TV) talks a lot about how it is fighting to support and protect it's small farms, but then does this kind of thing.
There's more to this story, but this isn't the place to go into it out of respect for the OP and not wanting to take over his thread.
I guess my take on this, is that most government agencies seem to try to care for the health of the large forest, but fail to care for the health of the indivual trees that make up the forest.
I find a similar analogy with some equipment I'm installing at work. It left me laughing while I banged my head on the wall out of frustration. We're instaling some wireless roadway sensors for vehicle detection at an intersection downtown. The instructions tell how to lay out the sensors for different types of detection zones and that you can use up to 15 sensors/channel. They tell that you can assign various configurations to make up the zones for each channel, but they never actually tell how to program the equipment to assign the sensors to the channels.
The system is comprised of three types of equipment. The sensors which go into the roadway, a wireless access point, and detection cards which provide power to the AP via POE (power over ethernet). They go into great detail on how the equipment works and how they inter-relate, but fail to give even a single sentence on how to program it to accomplish the task.:laughing: They tell how to program the sensors, but fail to tell how to initially find and access the sensors with the access point. Took me a full day to accomplish that. They tell how to program the detection cards, but not how to assign sensors to the cards. Our system is using two cards linked together. After two days I finally have things talking, but both cards are acting as one and reading the same sensors. When programming, I can only find one card. I have a feeling it is an addressing issue with the cards so Monday's project is to try to figure out how you set the address on the cards. Again, no mention of addressing in the instructions.:confused2: