CREEDMOOR, N.C. -- A strip of businesses on
Highway 56 at I-85 in Granville County is thriving. It's also a battle
zone in what is turning into a bitter fight over annexation. The town of
Creedmoor wants the acreage in the city limits.
"We're trying to improve Creedmoor and how we relate to a region," said
Creedmoor Mayor Darryl Moss.
But business owners want Creedmoor to stay out.
"Basically, all Creedmoor has to offer us is a tax bill," said
annexation opponent Randy Perry.
The landscape is peppered with signs, and T-shirts carry the same
message -- stop annexation.
"Our numbers are growing daily as to who is opposing it," said Perry.
The property that Creedmoor wants to annex is technically in another
town's fire district. Butner, which is on the other side of Interstate 85,
has expressed an interest in the same tax-rich district for the town's
future growth.
Some residents say that given the choice, they'd rather be annexed by
Butner. But Butner, known for its hospitals and prisons, is run by the
state and isn't incorporated. For that reason, the town is unable to annex
any area.
Moss believes Creedmoor is the answer anyway.
"We're heavily weighted toward residential, and this will help us in
the commercial state," said Moss.
The mayor admitted that annexation is an uphill battle. The annexation
is opposed by both the Granville County Commission and the state of North
Carolina because of Butner, as well as a determined group of opponents who
appear willing to stop the annexation drive -- whatever the cost.
"It's cheaper for us to pay a lawyer and tie it up in court than it is
to pay the tax bill," said Perry.
If annexation is successful, Creedmoor will reap an additional $500,000
a year in tax revenues. Business owners say their taxes will double.
Creedmoor will hold a public hearing on the proposed annexation on Jan.
31. The city commissioners are scheduled to vote in late February.
Reporter: Fred Taylor
Photographer: Courtney Davis
Online Editor: Dana Franks