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Reno County planning staff outlines major draft text amendments to lot-split, setback and lot-dimension rules
Summary
Planning staff presented proposed changes to Reno County's subdivision and zoning regulations, including removing a 7-acre maximum for agricultural lot splits, new minimum frontage and setback standards, and related clarifications. Commissioners asked staff to return with a clean draft for review next month.
Planning staff outlined a wide-ranging package of proposed text amendments to Reno County's subdivision and zoning regulations at the May 15 Planning Commission meeting, focusing on agricultural lot-split rules, minimum lot dimensions, and uniform setback standards.
The county planner said the main change would be to remove the current 7-acre maximum for agricultural lot splits. "So what we're proposing here is to eliminate that 7 acre maximum," the planner said, describing a structure under which landowners could create one lot split of any size so long as the resulting building site met a 3-acre minimum and other public-works requirements.
Why it matters: Commissioners were presented examples the planner said illustrate how the 7-acre limit and the county's current width-to-depth ratio can produce illegal or awkward parcel configurations, long narrow ("flag") lots and unbuildable back parcels. Staff said the proposed approach keeps a one-time split limitation (a property owner may only create a single lot split without rezoning or platting) while allowing more flexibility in how that split is sized, with conditions intended to preserve agricultural character and public-safety protections.
Key proposals described by staff
- Eliminate the 7-acre maximum for agricultural lot splits and instead allow one split of any acreage provided the new building site meets a minimum of 3 acres; additional development would require rezoning and platting.
- Require any split to comply with all public-works divisions, including sanitation (septic/well), road/entrance permits and other environmental or engineering requirements; staff emphasized that a 3-acre split that is mostly pond or otherwise unable to meet sanitation standards would not produce an approved building permit.
- Replace the existing width-to-depth ratio requirement with minimum continuous road-frontage widths.…
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