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Bluff council reopens discussion of proposed idling ordinance, delays vote pending enforcement research

Bluff Town Council · March 17, 2026

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Summary

Council members discussed expanding a drafted idling ordinance to cover all vehicles, raising the trigger time from two to about ten minutes, and lowering proposed fines; enforcement mechanisms will be researched and the ordinance returned for future consideration.

The Bluff Town Council reopened discussion on a previously drafted idling ordinance at its March 17 meeting, but postponed any final vote while council and staff research enforcement mechanisms.

Mayor Josh Ewing reintroduced the draft and councilmembers debated three core elements: the time threshold for a violation (the draft read two minutes; members suggested increasing to around ten minutes), the per-offense penalty (the draft suggested $500, with several members proposing a range of $100–$250), and which vehicles the ordinance should cover. Council agreed to expand the ordinance to apply to all vehicles rather than just commercial vehicles, following earlier public-comment input to that effect. Members also noted commonly exempted scenarios such as warming a school bus, which can take about 15 minutes and is listed in the draft’s exemptions.

Council members emphasized balancing residents’ quality-of-life and air-quality concerns against practical needs for drivers and local businesses. They discussed mapping or overlay zones to designate where idling restrictions would apply so that areas used for legitimate loading/unloading or brief stops are not unintentionally penalized.

No motion to adopt the ordinance was made; staff will research enforceability options and return the ordinance with proposed edits for another Council discussion and a possible vote at a future meeting.

Next steps noted by staff include drafting revised ordinance language to reflect the Council’s direction on time thresholds, fees and vehicle applicability and outlining enforcement approaches for legal review.