The City didn’t allow shipping or freight containers in residential or commercial zones before, but approved an ordinance allowing them with conditions after the public hearing.
If a residential lot is undergoing a construction project, a freight container may be temporarily placed on the property, strictly for storage. The container may not be used as an abode, for recreation or for cooking.
In commercial zones a freight container may be placed permanently, also strictly for storage, but it can’t block any right-of-way and it must be to the side or back of the business. Up to three containers may be placed on a commercial lot.
In both residential and commercial zones the shipping container must have a “uniform appearance” and be free of graffiti.
The ordinance was approved unanimously by the City Council. There was no public comment during the public hearing.
The second ordinance the P&Z put forth did not meet with the City Council’s approval.
The ordinance sought to place a six-month moratorium on issuing home-based business licenses. P&Z Chairman Nathan LaFont said the P&Z Commission needed time to sound out residents and business owners. The current ordinance is badly written, he said, making it difficult to enforce equitably and fairly. He said home-based-business permits “were treated the same as a business license,” and there were contradictory requirements on creating no traffic.
Mayor Pro-Tem Kim Skinner said the City Council asked the P&Z to work on the ordinance October 2018, decrying the length of time it was taking to draft it.
She presented home-based-business ordinances from other towns, recommending the Las Cruces ordinance.
Skinner, City Council Members Michael Williams and Travis Atwell all said the City would be missing out on much needed gross receipts taxes and the P&Z should be able to draft the ordinance quickly without a need for a moratorium.
LaFont asked that the City “hire a planning and zoning expert,” and said, “We need assistance from staff and staff disappears,” referring to the large turnover in city managers Elephant Butte has experienced in recent years.
His request for an expert was not addressed and LaFont was told to make the ordinance a P&Z priority.
The subsequent vote denied passage of the moratorium on home-based business permits.