The Cherokee County Board of Commissioners unanimously adopted a resolution March 3 supporting legislative annexation of land in south Cherokee into the City of Woodstock, including a portion of an existing subdivision, the Dixie Speedway property and an intervening industrial parcel intended to improve connectivity.
The resolution, introduced under agenda item 6.1, was described by staff as covering roughly 142 acres inside Woodstock’s agreed growth boundary; staff said the City of Woodstock is willing to address issues with a private road system if the parcels annex. Commissioner Ragsdale moved to adopt the resolution and related exhibits; Commissioner Carter seconded the motion, which carried unanimously.
Commissioners said the parcels lie inside the city’s growth boundary and that annexation would not change the expected pattern of development. Staff noted the homeowners’ association for a subdivision had sought legislative annexation because absentee ownership prevented reaching the 60% owner consent threshold required under standard annexation procedures.
The resolution as adopted signals county support for the city’s request to pursue legislative annexation at the state level; the county’s action is a local supportive resolution, not a transfer of property or city jurisdiction by itself.