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Baker County LPA workshop zeroes in on roads, subdivisions, solar fields and agritourism ahead of comp‑plan update

2833103 · February 13, 2025
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Summary

Baker County Land Planning Agency members and staff met Feb. 13 to begin shaping amendments to the county’s comprehensive plan and land‑development regulations, focusing on when developers must pave roads, how to handle lot sizes and septic, and new rules for solar fields and agritourism.

Baker County Land Planning Agency members and staff met Feb. 13 for a workshop on the county’s EAR and the comp‑plan amendments that must be completed after the county submits its letter of intent in April.

The discussion centered on a handful of proposed priorities the planning director had circulated in advance: when private development must construct paved roads and turn them over to the county, how to handle subdivision lot sizes and exemptions, whether and how to allow solar facilities across unincorporated Baker County, how to define agritourism uses, and steps to improve public outreach and county bylaws.

The county’s planning director (name not specified) told the group that submitting a letter of intent in April will “start the clock for our 1 year time frame to, have an actual amendment ready to be submitted,” and that the consultant under contract will help run public workshops and draft regulatory language.

Roads and subdivision standards were the most contested subjects. Board member Gabe argued developers should pave roads and dedicate them to the county, saying he “really, really strongly feel[s] if someone's going to come and do a development, they can pave the roads and turn them over to the county.” Other members warned that requiring paving for every subdivision could raise housing costs in Baker County and noted the county’s…

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