Votes at a glance: what the Manatee County board decided Feb. 12
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The Board approved two land‑development text amendments and an LDA, approved increased commercial allocation at Trivesta and Bradenton Estates 2 PDR, tabled a consent‑item denial and denied the large Lone Valley rezoning; several items were continued or pulled for further work.
Key outcomes from the Manatee County Board of County Commissioners’ Feb. 12 land‑use meeting:
- LDA Lazy C Ranch (LDA 24‑03): Approved, 6–1. Developer to construct phased roadway/stormwater improvements tied to Rye/Buckeye roads; impact‑fee credits and deferred ROW credits included.
- LDCT amendments: Adopted — LDCT 25‑09 (ordinance 2602) (small recovery homes/residential care text amendments) and LDCT 25‑06 (ordinance 2605) (RV/mobile home park provisions). The RV/mobile‑park amendments passed unanimously after deliberation about evacuation practices.
- Trivesta PDMU (PDMU1422PR4): The board approved increasing the development’s commercial allocation from 100,000 to 150,000 sq. ft.; vote passed 5–2. Commissioners raised questions about buffers, lighting and wetlands; the applicant affirmed compliance with LDC standards.
- Consent agenda denial resolution (R‑26004, State Road 64 / Uline Road commercial rezone): The board voted 5–2 to table a resolution that would have formalized a prior denial, allowing the applicant time to return with revised materials.
- Lone Valley rezoning (PDR2432ZG) and linked impact‑fee credit agreement: After extended debate and public opposition, the board denied the Lone Valley rezone (formal findings to be returned April 23, 2026). The companion impact‑fee‑credit item was pulled for separate handling.
- Bradenton Estates 2 rezone (PDR2508): The board approved rezoning ~80.7 acres to PDR for 80 single‑family detached lots with clustered layout and expanded buffers; the motion to deny failed and the approval passed 4–3.
Why it matters: The votes advance developer‑funded infrastructure work in the county (LDA) and adopt code changes that affect sheltering and residential care; the Lone Valley denial shows continuing concern about large new subdivisions and corridor capacity in the Buckeye area.
What to watch next: Staff will return formal findings for denied items; applicants whose items were continued or tabled will work with staff and HOAs to revise access, use lists or mitigation; timelines and LDA milestone reporting will be tracked by Public Works and Development Services.
