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Springdale planning commission debates buffer rules for commercial properties adjacent to homes
Summary
At a Oct. 1 work meeting, Springdale planning commissioners discussed three staff-drafted buffer options (fence, discontinuous fence with berm, wide landscape) for commercial properties abutting residential parcels, raising maintenance, placement and negotiation concerns and directing staff to revise wording and return with options.
At a meeting on Oct. 1 at the Canyon Community Center, the Springdale Planning Commission discussed draft regulations that would require enhanced buffering and screening where commercial properties abut residential uses in town.
The issue matters because the commission is trying to reduce visual and nuisance impacts on neighbors while balancing the property needs of small commercial parcels. The staff report presented three options — a narrow continuous fence, a wider discontinuous fence with berm and a large vegetated buffer — and commissioners spent the bulk of the meeting debating where fences must sit, who maintains landscaping and how to encourage neighbor-to-neighbor negotiation.
Planning staff contact Nile Connolly summarized the options: “this item is just carrying forward or carrying over from the last discussion, that you had, starting a conversation on how to create a group buffer between commercial uses and residential uses in town,” and explained that the staff report offers three alternative…
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