Senate approves bill restricting county authority over residential development after robust debate

2026 Senate · March 3, 2026

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Summary

Senate File 24-42 would limit county boards from restricting residential construction other than for life, health and safety reasons. Opponents warned it would remove local land-use tools and risk sprawl; proponents framed it as a property-rights and housing-affordability measure. The measure passed 28-16.

Senators debated and passed Senate File 24-42, a bill that prohibits county boards of supervisors from restricting construction or development of residential dwellings except for reasons of life, health and safety. Supporters described the measure as restoring property rights and easing housing constraints; opponents said it would strip counties of tools to manage growth and protect agricultural land.

Senator Webster, the bill sponsor, said the measure focuses regulatory authority on "life, health and safety" and framed the proposal as restoring decision-making to landowners. "If we want a government that's for the people and for the land owners, we passed this bill today," Webster said in closing remarks.

Senator Weiner urged caution, calling the bill "an interesting bill" that, in his view, would remove counties'ability to regulate residential development beyond safety concerns and could enable unchecked residential sprawl that threatens agricultural land and local service provision. He cited Iowa Code language that frames county zoning to preserve agricultural land and facilitate services.

The Senate passed the bill 28-16. Supporters said the change would allow more housing development in counties; opponents said it could increase infrastructure and service burdens and accelerate conversion of farmland.

What happens next: The bill will be messaged as passed and, if enacted, would constrain county zoning authority; counties and local officials may seek clarifying guidance or legislative follow-up.