Huntington Mayor Urges County to Develop or Sell Thousand-Acre Lime Site
Huntington Mayor Charles Guerri pushed Baker County commissioners to act on a 1,000-acre former lime plant site sitting idle near town.

Huntington Mayor Charles Guerri brought a pointed message to Baker County commissioners Wednesday: the roughly 1,000-acre parcel the county owns near Huntington is an economic opportunity going to waste.
The property, known locally as Lime, sits on the site of a former cement and lime plant. Guerri urged commissioners to explore development options for the land, up to and including an outright sale, framing the largely dormant parcel as an asset the county has yet to put to work.
The former industrial site carries both the weight of local history and the potential of its sheer size. At approximately 1,000 acres, the Lime parcel represents a significant landholding near Huntington, a small community in western Baker County that has seen limited economic growth in recent years. Guerri's appeal to commissioners suggests local leadership in Huntington views the site as central to any serious conversation about the town's economic future.

Baker County commissioners did not take immediate action following Guerri's remarks, and no formal proposal was presented at the meeting. Whether the county pursues development partnerships, seeks buyers, or holds the property remains an open question, but Guerri's appearance before the board signals that Huntington is pressing the issue with renewed urgency.
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