Council approves multiple plats, rezoning and an ETJ release as neighborhood development moves forward
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Summary
On voice votes the council approved a rezoning for a triplex at 10371 Manana Drive, final plats for Horizon Park Unit 4 and Cottonwood Cove Unit 2, a preliminary plat for Flor Del Bosque, and an amended petition to release about 1,478.4 acres from the city's extraterritorial jurisdiction. Staff answered questions about utilities, wastewater and park access for nearby residents.
The Socorro City Council on Jan. 15 approved several land-use items advancing residential development and a petition to remove land from the city's extraterritorial jurisdiction.
Lorraine Guimiro, the city planner, presented a rezoning request to change Lot 1, Block 12 of Alameda Estates (10371 Manana Drive) from R-1 (single-family) to R-2 (medium-density) to allow construction of a triplex. With no public speakers at the hearing, and after staff outlined a single written concern in the packet and the planning commission's recommendation for approval, the council adopted the ordinance on its second reading.
Council then approved a series of plats and waiver requests associated with the Horizon Park and Cottonwood Cove developments. Developer representatives explained that the proposed final plats include storm-drainage tie-ins to an existing pond, utility extensions (water and sanitary sewer), and a planned 1.5‑acre park in one of the adjacent subdivisions. Staff and the developer said they coordinated with the Lower Valley Water District on wastewater design and that the final plats will allow the developer to extend paved access and utilities to previously landlocked properties.
Separately, staff reported that an amended petition received Dec. 9 met statutory requirements to release approximately 2.31 square miles (1,478.4 acres) from the City of Socorro’s ETJ; staff verified the required signatures and recommended council consideration. Council moved and approved the release by voice vote.
What this means: the approvals allow the city and developers to proceed with entitlements, utility extensions and bidding schedules. Staff noted planning commission votes and, where relevant, an abstention or written opposition in the commissions' records. Council asked staff to continue coordination to ensure utilities reach affected residents and to integrate park access for new neighborhoods.

