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Planning commission backs wildlife-impact analysis for large residential plats

Fulshear Planning and Zoning Commission · May 1, 2026
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Summary

The Fulshear Planning and Zoning Commission on May 1 recommended approval of ordinance 2026-1524 requiring a wildlife-impact analysis for residential developments of 20 acres or more inside city limits; staff called it 'part one' of a two-step process and said the study would be performed by licensed biologists and reviewed with plat applications.

The Fulshear Planning and Zoning Commission recommended approval of ordinance 2026-1524 on May 1, 2026, which would require a wildlife-impact analysis for residential developments of 20 acres or more inside city limits.

Staff told the commission the ordinance is intended to preserve natural elements on large parcels as development proceeds and incorporates guidance from the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Staff described the item as "part 1 of 2": the current amendment requires the study; a later ordinance will specify consequences if protected species or critical habitat are identified.

Commissioners asked how the requirement would be applied and who would perform the work. Staff said the analysis would be submitted with plats (similar to a drainage or traffic study) and must be conducted by a licensed biologist recognized by Fish and Wildlife. The ordinance applies only to properties inside city limits and not to the extraterritorial jurisdiction.

Staff also said review would initially be internal but that summaries could be provided to bodies such as the Planning and Zoning Commission or the Parks and Recreation board if the commission preferred. A commissioner asked how many 20-acre-plus parcels would be affected; staff said the number is "minimal" but pointed to larger tracts south of FM 1093 as potential candidates.

A motion to recommend approval was made and seconded; the commission voted in favor and the ordinance will move to City Council for consideration at its May 19 meeting.

Next steps: City staff will finalize any template references (staff noted a leftover code citation that will be corrected) and will return with the second part of the proposal that addresses remedial options if protected species are documented.