The Harlingen City Commission voted to deny a special-use permit (SUP) requested for a smoke/adult business at 803 Dixieland Road following concerns from the police department, school staff and commissioners about proximity to Harlingen High School South and the risk of juvenile access to vaping products.
Harlingen Police Department leadership warned the commission about the location and product types. The police chief said officers have recently made "several arrests with juveniles breaking and entering into several of the vape shops in the city" and expressed concern about product marketing that could resemble items attractive to minors, and about enforcement costs for testing THC content.
A school staff member testifying at the meeting said the proposed location is near places frequented by students and predicted increased access and misuse: "Kids will find a way, to get this… They'll get, like, a on the way to school or maybe after school, they'll get one from their bigger brothers," the speaker said.
The SUP application listed proposed hours of operation from 9 a.m. to 2 a.m.; commissioners and the chief suggested hours limitations and distance buffers from schools or day cares as possible tools but concluded existing proximity posed unacceptable risk. The commission voted to deny the SUP by voice vote after a motion to deny carried.
Commissioners directed staff and legal counsel to draft ordinance changes that would use the city's zoning authority to add distance buffers from schools, day cares and places of worship and to consider cumulative location limits for vape/smoke shops. The chief said Police Department records could be produced to support future regulatory proposals.
The denial is not an outright ban citywide but reflects the commission's decision that this specific SUP was not appropriate at the proposed location; staff will work with police, planning and legal to propose regulatory options for future consideration.