Mesa planning board reviews proposed zoning changes for manufactured-home and recreational-vehicle parks
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At its April 23 meeting the Mesa Planning and Zoning Board heard a staff presentation on a proposed amendment to Title 11, Chapters 34 and 87 of the Mesa City Code to change permitted uses, definitions, height and setback rules for manufactured-home and recreational-vehicle parks; no board vote was recorded.
At its April 23 meeting, the Mesa Planning and Zoning Board heard a staff presentation on a proposed amendment to chapters 34 and 87 of Title 11 of the Mesa City Code that would revise rules for manufactured-home parks and recreational-vehicle parks and subdivisions; the board did not record a vote on the item.
The amendment text described by staff would, among other changes, modify permitted uses in manufactured-home and recreational-vehicle subdivisions to allow “dwelling units of conventional construction,” add a maximum height requirement for conventional-construction dwellings in those parks, change how required yard setbacks are measured, and update multiple definitions (including manufactured home, manufactured-home lot, manufactured-home park, manufactured-home subdivision, recreational-vehicle accessory structure, recreational vehicle, recreational-vehicle lot, recreational-vehicle park, recreational-vehicle subdivision) and add a definition for “recreational vehicle, park model.” The proposal also includes minor revisions to wording about emergency parking. The staff recommendation recorded in the agenda packet was adoption citywide.
The board’s meeting record shows the amendment was presented under agenda Item 4(a); no public comment, motion, or formal recommendation by the board appears in the transcript for this meeting. The transcript entry for Item 4(a) indicates it was to be a review and recommendation to the City Council, but the Planning and Zoning Board did not take a formal vote on the amendment at this session.
Because the item concerns changes to the Mesa City Code, any formal recommendation from the Planning and Zoning Board would be forwarded to the Mesa City Council for consideration and possible ordinance adoption. The board convened for roughly four minutes and handled a separate consent agenda before adjourning; the amendment text in the meeting packet remains an item for future action or referral to Council based on normal procedures.
No direct quotations are included because the transcript contains no attributed remarks about the amendment beyond the staff read description.
