Citizen Portal
Sign In

Lifetime Citizen Portal Access — AI Briefings, Alerts & Unlimited Follows

Commission debates requiring geotechnical soil reports for multi-unit and non‑single‑family developments

Huntington City Planning Commission · March 12, 2026

Loading...

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Commissioners discussed a draft change that would require geotechnical analyses before issuing zoning clearance for duplexes, multi‑unit buildings, subdivisions and other non‑single‑family projects, with an exemption path by the zoning administrator for some single‑family or accessory structures.

The Huntington City Planning Commission considered a proposed rule change on March 12 that would require geotechnical soil‑analysis reports before issuing zoning clearance for projects beyond single‑family residences.

Jessica Lee, planning and zoning administrator, reviewed the draft wording (redline changes) that would require a geotechnical report prior to zoning clearance for duplexes, fourplexes, apartments and subdivisions. "We're going to now require geotechnical soil analysis for any dwelling above a single family home," a commissioner summarized while reviewing the draft. Commissioners discussed drawing a narrow exemption for single‑family homes and small accessory structures (200 square feet was discussed as a threshold) and debated whether the zoning administrator should retain discretion to exempt some single‑family projects.

Participants flagged potential gray areas—if an accessory building is later converted into a dwelling, or if a single‑family structure is unusually tall or later expanded, when the requirement should apply—and suggested wording that allows an exemption "upon zoning administrator review" rather than a blanket exemption. The commission leaned toward a default requirement for non‑single‑family projects with an administrative exemption for single‑family situations judged to pose low geotechnical risk.

Commissioners asked staff to refine draft language to clarify the 200‑square‑foot reference, the exemption process and the point in time when a geotechnical report would be required (at zoning clearance or building permit). Staff will return revised text for the commission to review and, if adopted, the rule would change the information applicants must submit before zoning clearance.