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Residents urge council to retain 4‑to‑2 occupancy rule as Salisbury Town Center lawsuit proceeds

5418702 · June 4, 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

Public commenters at the June 2 Salisbury City Council meeting urged the council to keep an occupancy-limiting "4-to-2" rule and criticized a developer-related lawsuit over the Salisbury Town Center sale. Speakers urged alternatives to altering historic single-family neighborhoods and recommended developer requirements for affordable units.

Residents at the June 2 Salisbury City Council session urged the council to resist repeal of a long-standing "4-to-2" occupancy rule and raised a recent lawsuit challenging the sale of property tied to the Salisbury Town Center apartment project.

What happened: Robert Taylor, a Salisbury resident, told the council he had obtained a copy of a newly filed 40-page lawsuit seeking to rescind the city's sale of property connected to the Salisbury Town Center apartment development. Taylor suggested the city should question whether it is appropriate to pay outside counsel in the matter when the developer and the…

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