![]() ![]() “The property owners, they’re not designers and vertical builders,” he said. ![]() Thursday morning’s meeting was the first since March.Ĭommunity Development Director Pat Putt said the process was likely always going to involve a development firm. The goal is to allow “cooperation and community design flexibility (and) … to reestablish and revitalize existing, non-incorporated communities in Eastern Summit County.” A project would ultimately be decided by the County Council. ![]() The Village Overlay Committee uses a specific process outlined in the Eastern Summit County Development Code that spells out how landowners can work together to conduct preliminary land planning before submitting a recommendation to the Eastern Summit County Planning Commission. “We really got as far as we could with the concept plans and it was going to take quite a lot more effort for staff to actually create these site plans,” she told the council.Ĭounty Council Chair Glenn Wright estimated the development proposal could cost $1 million “before a shovel of dirt is moved.” Kirsten Whetstone, the county planner leading the project, said committee members were satisfied with the arrangement. “I think we originally conceived of the village overlay as kind of a local process for the community to have some voice in the way things would shape up,” he said. County Councilor Roger Armstrong asked whether developer control of the project aligns with its original intent, to allow locals to plan how they want to see Hoytsville grow. ![]()
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