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Guadalupe County signals policy to decline routine acceptance of developer-built roads, pushes tighter subdivision rules
Summary
At a Oct. 14 workshop, the Guadalupe County Commissioners discussed rewriting subdivision regulations to clarify road acceptance, favoring a default policy that the county will not accept developer-built roads into the county maintenance system unless the court formally approves them.
County Judge opened a Oct. 14 workshop of the Guadalupe County Commissioners Court saying the primary topic was “the process and requirements of accepting a road into the county road system and potential revisions to the Guadalupe County subdivision regulations relating to road acceptance.”
The discussion centered on three recurring issues in predevelopment meetings: road acceptance into county maintenance, adoption of a major thoroughfare plan, and frontage requirements for lots on county-maintained roads. Road and Bridge Administrator Burnside said the Development Center is proposing a 150-foot frontage minimum and emphasized the need for clearer definitions. “150… feels like a pretty good number,” Burnside said about a proposed change from the county’s informal 200-foot standard.
The county’s planning staff (Development Center) and commissioners debated how to define frontage (for example, whether frontage should be where a driveway or front door faces) and how competing jurisdictional access (for example, a driveway onto a TxDOT road while a lot fronts a county road) affects enforceability. Development Center staff Danielle raised questions about…
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