Columbia County’s Planning Commission on Jan. 15 approved several non‑rezoning items on a largely packed agenda: a massage operator license, a temporary‑use authorization for a property with storm damage and multiple variance requests.
Licensing and TUA
The commission approved a massage operator license for Cheryl Connell and Sari (Sarah) Rodriguez to provide mobile massage only following a staff recommendation and a motion from a commissioner.
A temporary‑use authorization at 4017 Prescott Drive — requested after storm damage to allow an owner to remain in a trailer while repairs are completed — was presented by planning staff member Dylan. Staff said the contractor for the house had fallen through and that a second contractor was working with the owner and insurer. Ed Jones, the property owner, and nearby neighbors spoke in support of the renewal, and the commission approved a 12‑month extension conditioned on the trailer’s removal once repairs and necessary permits are completed.
Variances
The commission recommended approval of several variances after staff presentations:
- A rear‑setback reduction to 10 feet at 5359 Magnolia Court to permit an RV‑storage structure; staff said the only adjacent affected neighbor provided a letter of support.
- Approval with conditions of a variance at 3510 Gloucester Court to allow an existing retaining wall to remain above the three‑foot front‑yard height limit and to legalize an existing shed that encroaches into setbacks; staff said an easement‑encroachment agreement was in process and replacement sheds must meet code.
- Variations to overlay and setback requirements for an existing commercial structure on Furies Ferry Road, with conditions requiring subdivision along zoning lines before any future change of use.
Each of these items was advanced by motion, second and a chair’s announcement that the motion carried. The commission emphasized that specific permit‑level compliance (building permits, easement agreements and final engineered plans) remains a condition of approvals and will be enforced during later reviews.
Next steps
Decisions that were phrased as recommendations will be forwarded to the Board of Commissioners for final action on Feb. 3; routine approvals (licensing and some variances) will proceed to permitting and code enforcement as appropriate.