ORDINANCE 174
A public hearing will be held to determine if zoning code should be changed to no longer allow storage containers permanently in residential districts. The amended ordinance would allow them temporarily if the residence is under construction.
The ordinance also places stricter rules on storage containers in commercial zones, allowing them permanently, but requiring they be placed beside or behind primary structures, not in a public right of way, not in a fire lane and not in a landscaped area.
Storage containers also must be “kept in good repair” with a “uniform appearance” free from graffiti.
No stacking of storage containers would be allowed.
One cannot live, cook, camp or recreate in them under the new ordinance.
Storage containers, referred to in parts of the residential and commercial zoning code, is more sharply defined to include any container constructed “for the purpose of transporting freight on a truck, railroad or ship.”
ORDINANCE 189
A public hearing will be held to determine if a moratorium should be placed on home-based business licenses for the remainder of the year.
The code does not “provide clear standards that can be applied in the consideration of applications for home-based business licenses,” according to the ordinance, and the City is being inundated with such applications.
During the moratorium the City Council and Planning and Zoning Commission will revise the comprehensive plan. In addition, the P&Z will review and revise “zoning ordinances and land-use regulations.”
SIERRA DEL RIO GOLF COURSE
The City Council will go into executive session for the fourth time on the Sierra Del Rio Golf Course management deal pending with Spirit Golf Management.
Spirit Golf is proposing an eight-year management contract. Partners Richard Holcomb and Todd Barranger formed the company to respond to the City’s advertised Request for Proposals, with only Spirit Golf responding.
Holcomb and Barranger are buying Picacho Hills Country Club in Las Cruces. Their marketing plans include shared membership privileges and competitions among the two golf courses.
The partners are also partial owners of Falcon Golf Club outside of Phoenix, Ariz., which will also share mutual membership with Sierra del Rio, Holcomb said.