Landslide spooks foes of those so inclined.

PositionWestern

It wasn't as bad as Peeks Creek, where in 2004 a landslide killed five people, but when mud gushed down the mountain below a Maggie Valley amusement park recently, the disaster potential was greater. Eighteen families lost houses or were relocated for fear of more slides. There was one other big difference: Nature triggered the Macon County slide, but the one at Ghost Town in the Sky began when a retaining wall collapsed.

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That mishap, along with other recent ones, has bolstered a push in western North Carolina for laws to protect people and property. Bruce Goforth, a state representative from Buncombe County, says he'll introduce legislation when the General Assembly convenes this spring to regulate steep-slope development ("A Slippery Slope," June, 2007). It will join a bill introduced last year by another Democrat, Ray Rapp of Madison County. Goforth faces a challenge in May's primary from former Buncombe County Commissioner Patsy Keever, who promises to introduce a tougher bill if elected.

Goforth, a contractor and member of the North Carolina Home Builders Association, wants steep-slope rules limited to western counties. "You can't get a bill passed," he says, "that would affect 17 counties but apply to all 100." His would focus on site and road preparation and poorly engineered projects. It would set minimum standards and require counties counties to enforce them but give them two years to start. "We don't see houses sliding off the mountain. But we...

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