'via Blog this'The flier urged recipients to "make them explain why they think your home(s) should be demolished." It welcomed anyone to contact the "concerned citizen" at an e-mail address, nobcc2035@hotmail.com.
"There is nothing further from the truth," Mayor Tom Rowland said about claims that the city will be taking recipients' property.
Panicked homeowners should know who targeted them with false propaganda, he said.
"I'm upset that somebody who is anonymous thinks they have a right to spread fear and untruths through our community," Rowland said.
"They may not have committed a crime," the mayor said, "but I think whoever wrote this should be exposed."
There even have been indirect threats that some city officials might find their houses in ashes, he said.
The author referred to the BCC 2035 plan being developed by Bradley County, Cleveland and Charleston to accommodate growth for the next 25 years. The plan breaks the county into three study areas, a north corridor from Mouse Creek to Charleston, a south corridor around exit 20 and a central city area.
The central city area includes eastern and southern Cleveland neighborhoods and several blocks left behind after Whirlpool moves to its new Benton Pike location.
The flier refers to something it calls the Delphi Technique being used to manufacture the appearance of community consensus although, it states, no one has heard of the 2035 plan. Some websites say the Delphi Technique is part of a plan to establish a new world order that takes citizens out of decision-making.
In fact, Rowland said, there has been nothing secretive about the 2035 planning. There have been more than a dozen public hearings with four study committees that include community residents in each area, he said. The final document will go through public hearings and votes before the planning commission and City Council, he said.
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