The Lincoln City Council’s Committee of the Whole on Oct. 14 placed a request from Brew 66 for a recurring parking-spot closure (Sundays in October, November and December) across from Ink and Print Books, 125 N. Kickapoo, on the consent agenda and agreed—by consensus—to allow the vendor to operate on Sunday, Oct. 19 even though the council will vote on the request at its Oct. 20 regular meeting.
City staff and councilors spent the item discussing a newly created “parking spot closure” form and whether the city should streamline approvals for food trucks and coffee trailers. The mayor and staff said the form was intended to provide departments and aldermen adequate notice and time to vet requests; Alderman Baker and others urged a faster, more business-friendly approval path for predictable requests.
City attorney discussion noted that use of a public parking space can raise property-rights and public-rights-of-way issues that historically require council approval; the city attorney said he would research whether the council could delegate some approvals by ordinance. Officials also clarified that applicants are expected to provide proof of insurance and that the city does not plan to provide electricity or other utilities by default. The packet shows Brew 66’s requested hours as 8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Mayor and councilors said downtown business groups were given the new form and that the council wants the two-week lead time for review to be observed, though members signaled openness to refinements. The council placed the Brew 66 request on the consent agenda and recorded no objection to the vendor operating Oct. 19 prior to the formal Oct. 20 vote.
The council did not take a final vote on the policy changes; staff were asked to continue refining the form and bring recommended changes back to the council.