Shelter seeks OK for woodworking facility

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WINCHESTER - A shelter for homeless men plans to turn an old warehouse right into a furniture-building operation to guide tenants find out abilities and earn funds.

The Winchester Union Rescue Mission filed a ask for to rezone property at 414 N. Loudoun St. from high-density residential use to central organization, inside historic district. The rezoning is needed in order for the shelter to operate a woodworking facility within the residence. The creating truly is based along the adjacent Clark Street, but lies around the house behind a house on the corner - all of that is owned by the applicant.

Adult men who reside on the mission would operate from the facility to produce products they then could market either as direct orders or via the web, based on the organization’s representatives and city officials. The shelter has for months been renovating the constructing in preparation for turning it right into a woodworking facility.

At a work session Tuesday afternoon, the Winchester Organizing Commission appeared to help the ask for. Members did pose questions and expressed concerns about the proposed use, which includes possible noise the manufacturing may possibly create, parking issues and lumber deliveries.

Mission representative Mike Cardinale told the panel the organization would do whatever needed to mitigate noise that may arrive from the shop, although he added it was unlikely function would continue late into the evening. The shelter itself has a “lights out” policy in effect at 10 p.m., Cardinale said.

The applicant proffered in its request to prohibit the following uses around the website: retail sales except for products produced about the site, restaurant or bar, use of equipment with far more than 5 horsepower, any activity that would create great volumes of noxious fumes, auto repair, residential, processing or producing operations prior to 8 a.m. and immediately after 9 p.m., and outdoor storage of materials and supplies.

The applicant also proffered to set up a dust-collection program for processes involving sawing or planing of wood. Also, no element with the making could be leased or rented to any outside entity, officials said.

Intending Director Tim Youmans noted the constructing once served like a production facility. Youmans also commented that because the workers could well be residents with the shelter, based adjacent to the developing on North Cameron Street, the use isn’t likely to create automobile traffic.

The commission has scheduled a public hearing for the rezoning request for 3 p.m. Tuesday.

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