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Commissioners debate stiffer buffer enforcement and industrial buffer rules after warehouse growth

5120142 · July 2, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

County staff and residents pushed for stricter penalties, stop‑work orders and a two‑step permitting process to prevent unlawful clearing of required buffers. Commissioners also discussed whether existing I‑1 parcels should be treated as heavy industrial for buffer purposes to protect neighbors near warehouse development.

Effingham County commissioners and planning staff discussed proposals on July 1 to strengthen enforcement when required landscape buffers are removed, and to clarify buffer widths for industrial uses after residents raised concerns about recent warehouse development.

Staff said existing buffer disturbances have often been handled by stop‑work orders followed by negotiations. "We then, basically go into negotiations with the property owner," staff told the board, but officials said negotiations alone have not deterred repeat clearings on some sites.

What staff and residents proposed - Fines and stop‑work orders: staff recommended a steeper penalty structure tied to the area of disturbed buffer (example discussed: a minimum $500 fine per quarter‑acre disturbed, with proportional increases) and requiring replanting at up to triple the normal density.…

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