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Morris
 
Memphis Stone, in appeal, says supervisor had conflict

By Billy Davis

Memphis Stone and Gravel Co. has filed an appeal to fight a 2-2 vote by the Panola County Board of Supervisors.

Supervisors cast their tie vote on August 10, failing to overturn a county land commission decision that denied Memphis Stone a special exception permit.

Memphis Stone is seeking to move its current mining operation and wash plant from Highway 35 to a 200-acre tract in the Eureka community.

 The land commission, in a May decision, turned down the application in a 6-3 vote.

No date has been set for the hearing, which will be held before Circuit Judge Jimmy McClure in Batesville.

Supervisors, meeting Wednesday for a budget meeting, agreed to hire Batesville attorney Jay Westfaul to represent the county.

Board attorney Bill McKenzie recommended Westfaul, who has represented previous cases for Panola County government.

Court documents show Westfaul has begun responding to Memphis Stone, most recently by replying to a Bill of Exceptions, filed by Memphis Stone attorneys, which lists three reasons the court should should overturn the supervisors’ decision.

A conflict of interest?

One accusation is that District 4 Supervisor Kelly Morris should have recused himself because Memphis Stone had explored his family property for gravel.

Morris, reached Thursday, told The Panolian he was unaware he had been named in the circuit court appeal.

After reading the document, Morris said Memphis Stone had falsely alleged that he had “met with” the company and sought exploration of his property. The appeal is on file in the circuit court’s office.

Morris said the exploration happened by chance, when he saw a crew drilling on neighboring property and asked them to drill on his property, too.

 “I wanted to know if I had gravel – like anybody else would want to know,” he said. “To say that I ‘met with’ Memphis Stone and approached them  – that’s just not true,” he said.

Westfaul called the accusations “out of order” and “inflammatory” in his rebuttal, court documents show.

The planned gravel pit is located in Morris’ district and he made the board motion to turn down the company’s appeal.

The planned gravel truck route along Good Hope Road is located in front of Morris’ home, and Memphis Stone also alleges that Morris’ proximity to the truck route constitutes a conflict of interest.

‘No conflict of interest’

Memphis Stone’s second allegation is that Supervisor Bubba Waldrup wrongly recused himself from the board vote.

Westfaul, responding to that allegation, wrote that Waldrup was allowed by the Mississippi Constitution to “make his own decision.”

Before the board vote, Waldrup announced he would not vote because his family had once held a mining permit, which had since expired, from Memphis Stone.

A spokesman for the state Ethics Commission, contacted by the county, has said Waldrup was right to recuse himself.

A written opinion is pending from the state agency. 

Some issues undiscussed

Memphis Stone attorneys, in their only reference to the land commission in court documents, claim the board failed to name and address six conditions that are used for determining a zoning allowance.

The court documents do not name the conditions, nor which ones were or were not discussed, by the commission.

At the May meeting, zoning issues such as fire safety were named as criteria to consider but fire safety was not discussed as a main concern of the land commission.

Land commissioners discussed public safety more than any other issue, zeroing in on gravel trucks that would use the Good Hope Road route. They also viewed school bus routes of the South Panola School District before voting down the permit request.




Visitor Comments
 
Submitted By: Confused on what you want! Submitted: 8/28/2009
I would like to start with a fact about this whole land situation. Lamar has talked to Mr. Morris on numerous occasions and asked for his vote toward the land issue. Each time Mr. Morris has told Lamar that he had to think about his community. So from the beginning Lamar knew Mr. Morris’ feelings, but he asked for his support anyway. Voting day came and Mr. Morris votes against it in the benefit of his community. You see, Mr. Morris had done his homework! He followed up on the story from Senatobia to find those roads destroyed, which Memphis Stone and Gravel, too promised to fix. The patrons of that community didn’t like it being there either. The people of Hwy 35 have not been happy with that one. So he votes against it. It wasn’t a big deal that Mr. Morris had drilled on his land before the vote, but now it is! So now he wants to say that Mr. Morris’ vote should not count, why all of a sudden the change Lamar? Lamar didn’t WIN, he lost! Why didn’t Memphis Stone and Gravel say something to begin with, once again because they lost? They would know before they lost that drilling took place. Money is the root of all evil and right now Lamar that is your greatest vice. Then they fussed because Mr. Waldrup recused himself because of a mining permit for his family, they said that wasn’t a conflict because they had drilled on his land and the permit was expired. You are certainly confused on what you want? Just except the fact that you are not going to get rich. Think about your neighbors for a little while, In case you have forgotten, they are the ones that keep you in business at the store. Your selfishness is getting you nowhere. I challenge you to take the time to think about your neighbor and stop thinking about yourself.


Submitted By: WILLIE Submitted: 8/28/2009
HERE WE GO,THE COUNTY WILL BE OUT SEVERAL THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS FOR THIS LAWSUIT.


Submitted By: Eddie Submitted: 8/28/2009
In this time that jobs are scarce wouldnt produce some more jobs? 2. i think why the folks that don't won't the gravel pit is because they would not be getting a kick backoff of it. 3. I bet iff they had a good bit of land and they drilled for gravel I bet that they would sell the mineral rights to there land and get the ball roll at what ever cost.


Submitted By: I knew it... Submitted: 8/28/2009
Does Kelly Morris expect people to even care how the people exploring for gravel ended up on his land? Does it matter? What matters is that he lives on Good Hope Rd. The same road and community that he is accusing Johnson & the gravel compant of trying to destroy. Yet he looked for gravel in that same community. Does he expect us to beleive that he wouldn't have tried to mine had he found it. Why look if you have no intenetions of mining it. What a hypocrite. Sour grapes on Morris's part. This is going to cost the county big money in legal fees. I think we could use the added revenue and jobs in the area more than the legal expense of stopping a man from using his won property as he sees fit.


Submitted By: TINB Submitted: 8/28/2009
At least the lawyers are getting work.


Submitted By: Jeff Submitted: 8/28/2009
What jobs are you talking about? Memphis Stone & Gravel intends to simply move the jobs from their Hwy 35 mine to the proposed Eureka mine. That is not a gain of jobs. It's a transfer. The county will not earn any more in property taxes on the property whether a mine is there or not. It will remain classified agricultural. There are no monetary benefits, just costs of maintaining 6 miles of county roads that loaded gravel trucks will travel.


Submitted By: Eureka Resident Submitted: 8/28/2009
I would encourage several of the readers who have posted here to do some more homework. The fact is that there will be no new jobs created with this monstrous pit. The operation would be moved, so the net effect would be negligible. In addition, there are quite a few folks in the county that have had drilling done on their property. Some for oil or gas and others for gravel. Memphis Stone and Gravel admitted that at the meetings with the Land Commission. Mr. Morris is not a hypocrite. We are thankful he did what was right. The blame for the costs to the county lies in one place. The Supreme Court of MS has already upheld the decision of the Land Commission with regard to the Martin Bros. operation in Sardis. There is a precedent and we are confident that the Land Commission's decision will stand once again. To overturn the decision would dissolve the Land Commission (and all others like it around the state).


Submitted By: BOB Submitted: 8/28/2009
KELLY MORRIS DID WHAT FEW NOW-A-DAYS HAVE THE NERVE TO DO; THE RIGHT THING. HE SHOWED THE KIND OF INTEGRITY THAT THE OTHER FOUR USUALLY ONLY DREAM OF. I BET THE DeSOTO COUNTY FAMILY SUFFERING WITH THEIR SON FROM THAT GRAVEL TRUCK ACCIDENT WISH THERE HAD BEEN A KELLY MORRIS ON THE DeSOTO COUNTY BOARD. MS&G NEEDS TO MOVE FORWARD WITH THE APPEAL & STOP CRYING. THE ONLY PERSON INTERESTED IN A COUPLE HUNDRED GRAVEL TRUCKS ROARING THRU THEIR COMMUNITY IS THE FEW LINING THEIR POCKETS AT THEIR NEIGHBORS MISERY.


Submitted By: William Submitted: 8/30/2009
Don't you guys and gals love propaganda. I love how the gravel pit opponents say that no new jobs will be created as a result of this mine moving from Hwy 35 to Eureka. Technically they are right. What they fail to mention is jobs lost in Panola county. They fail to mention that if the plant can't relocate in Panola county, those jobs that they say will be trnasferred will be lost. Local truck drivers in the area will have less work. The opponents know this, but they focus their energy on "no new jobs". Let's be honest, if the pit is shot down, Panola county will LOSE some jobs. And to the poster who said that the property will not add tax revenue, how is that. If they locate a plant their generating tons of revenue, you are a fool if you don't think the county will reassess that property for a new value. So to clarify the misinformation posted here..Panola county will prevent to loss of some jobs in a time when we can't afford losses in employment and gain tax revenue if the gravel pit is opened. The bottom line on the Kelly Morris controversy is that he never disclosed this information. Why did we have to wait until it was disclosed during the appeal process? I think it's safe to say that Kelly Morris was not upfront about his own dealings and wished to keep them secret until his hand was forced. At least Bubba Waldrip was up front with his prior relationship. Lamar was right about Morris looking for gravel on his land. Now someone with the Panolian needs to ask Mr. Johnson the same question. Panola county needs a straight answer on why a person who tried to find their own gravel in this community is so against another man who has found it. I think that's a fair question.


Submitted By: John Submitted: 8/31/2009
William, Can you please tell us: (1) How many of tht MSG employees, currently working at the Hwy. 35 mine, live in Panola Co.? (2) What is the total # of jobs at the Hwy. 35 mine? (3) What is the projected # of jobs at the proposed Eureka mine? (4) Has MSG pledged to hire Panola Co. residents for any new openings? Thanks!


Submitted By: Weekly Reader Submitted: 8/31/2009
As an outsider looking in and following this weekly battle, is there another way in or out of this area? Is there a way that MSG can build their own gravel (no pun intended) road to use? Don't blast me out of the water with ridicule just wondering and not familiar with the area. Just a road they can use all by themselves?


Submitted By: voter Submitted: 8/31/2009
To those who think Panola County was going to be the beneficiary: you need to do some more homework and compare the cost of repairing destroyed roads vs any potential tax revenues. Of all the innuendo, I’m surprised no one has yet to raise environmental concerns. MSG is notorious for fill existing creeks/waterways with their overflow of silt from washing gravel. Again, do your homework; go check it out! For those critics of Mr. Morris who called him a “hypocrite”: So what if he drilled on his own land? So what if he fully intended on mining if gravel was found on his property? The most important thing to consider is before voting, he did the one thing most elected officials forget to do: he talked to his constituents; the overwhelming majority said NO gravel pit! He voted the way his constituency told him to vote. It’s hard to believe there are still “a few good men.” Good job Mr. Morris.


Submitted By: Eureka Resident Submitted: 8/31/2009
To answer Weekly Readers' question as to alternate access to the proposed mine, the answer is yes and no. There are back roads that lead to this area (Hentz, Martindale and Hubbard); however, none are capable of bearing the load of these large trucks. Also, most have curves and bends that would make them extremely dangerous for passenger cars. The proposed route takes the trucks down mostly straight road with only one bridge. Although Good Hope Road is straight, it is very hilly, especially as it approaches Hwy 6. Also, there are homes built right on the road. I'd encourage anyone unfamiliar with the area to right out through it. You'll see why area residents are so concerned. It's not all pasture and cropland.


Submitted By: Voter Submitted: 9/1/2009
If you can't do what you need to make a living what is the world coming to. Farmers don't we haul our trucks and equipment up and down the same roads in question loaded with our fruits of our land. If you had logs on your place to sell don't the heavy equipment and logs trucks have to travel the same roads? Surly these same people would not stop us from making a living off of the land we own!! Don't think the people who live on Good Hope road don't know what a gravel truck is because they have had them on these same roads for as long as I can remember, loaded and not loaded..You Know!! The monies earned from this pit will be put in Panola county, don't we need it?




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