Missoula News

Your local online source


Planning

Ravalli County Gets New Subdivision Regs With Key Change For Planning Efforts


By Greg Lemon, 11-20-06

Ravalli County commissioners adopted revisions to their subdivision regulations Monday and the changes included a significant move toward long-range planning.

Now, instead of having the county Planning Board hold public hearings and review subdivision applications, that duty will fall directly to the county commissioners.

The subdivision regulations revisions were due Oct. 1, and for the past several weeks, the revisions have been a top priority for a swamped Ravalli County planning office. Two weeks ago, the commissioners and planning board had a joint meeting to discuss the revisions. That meeting was continued until Monday.

The change in direction for the planning board is welcome, said board chairman Dan Huls.

With the amount of growth the county is experiencing, the planning board has become more like a subdivision review board, Huls said.

The whole idea with a planning board was to look into the future and try and advise the county on how it should plan for growth, Huls said. That responsibility has been sacrificed in favor of the tedious subdivision review duty.

Recently, the Planning Board, the members of which are all volunteer, held several lengthy meetings and worked for months on the Aspen Springs subdivision. The board eventually recommended the county commissioners deny the subdivision, which they did and now the developers of Aspen Springs are suing the county over that decision.

During the process of reviewing Aspen Springs, the planning board was swamped with hundreds of pages of documentation detailing the complex components of the subdivision’s plan, recommendations by the planning department and arguments for and against the subdivision.

Then the commissioners had to go through the same documentation and considered it along with the recommendations of the planning board and planning department.

Under the new subdivision regulations the process would be less repetitive. The county commissioners will hold one public hearing on a subdivision, taking public comment. That one meeting can extend for as long as necessary to receive all the appropriate information and comments, but the hope is by allowing developers and the public to address the county commissioners directly through the entire process, things will become more efficient, said commissioner Greg Chilcott.

“The priority has got to be planning,” Chilcott said Monday.

While he’s not looking forward to the increased workload this change will ultimately mean for the commissioners, he feels it’s the right move to get the county more focused on long-range planning. Besides, planning is exactly why the planning board was established.

“We’re going to use that expertise to try and get in front of the planning curve,” he said.

Huls is looking forward to the opportunity to focus on planning. It was the reason he applied to be on the board in the first place.

The Ravalli County Planning board already has a subcommittee focused on long-range planning. Huls expects that subcommittee to continue, but now they’ll be used more actively to inform the entire board.

Even though the planning board won’t have the same role in subdivision review, the commissioners are going to look to them for consultation on some subdivisions, he said. That means, the first thing the board must do is figure out how to set up a clear system to advise the commissioners when needed.

Changes to the structure of subdivision review and approval weren’t the only revisions to Ravalli County’s subdivision regulations. The other revisions dealt with the details of the subdivision application process. The two public meetings to review the revisions drew several comments from local developers and engineers who are intimately familiar with the process.

The revisions were based largely on the model subdivision regulations adopted by the Montana Associations of Counties to assist counties in the revision process, said Karen Hughes, Ravalli County Planning director.






Like this story? Get more! Sign up for our free newsletters.

Back to the NewWest Missoula page

Comments

Add your comment below

Be the first to comment on this article. Please complete the form below.


Comment Policy

NewWest.Net encourages robust and lively, but civil participation from our readers. By posting here, you agree to the NewWest.Net terms of service. You agree to keep your comments on topic, respectful and free of gratuitous profanity. Contributions that engage in personal attacks, racism, sexism, bigotry, hatred or are otherwise patently offensive will be subject to removal.

Other than using a filter that scans for comment spam, we do not moderate contributions before they are posted and we do not review every thread, so we ask that you help us in keeping the discussions civil and appropriate. Please email info@newwest.net to notify us of comments that may violate these guidelines. Thanks for your help and cooperation. Click here for some tips on how to best interact on NewWest.Net.

Your Comment

Name

Email

Remember my name and email address.

Notify me of follow-up comments.


Community Directory & Blog

  • Creative Media Partnership Enhances Buy Local Initiative

    New West Publishing LLC

    Here at NewWest.net we are excited to be working with the Sustainable Business Council (SBC) on an enhancement to their new Buy Local initiative and our new Buy Local blog.

  • Reach Out to Customers in a Friendly, Professional Voice

    New West Publishing LLC

    To blog or not to blog, that is the question on many businesses minds.  Here are the top six reasons your business should have a blog: *…

  • The BridgeMAXX Difference

    BridgeMaxx

    BridgeMAXX wireless high-speed Internet provides fast, flexible, and affordable service with the right plan to meet your needs. BridgeMAXX uses a wireless modem that transmits radio signals to and from…

  • Why Shop at Vann’s?

    Vann's

    Common sense says that a business must have customers to survive and the happier your customers, the better your business will do. But apparently common sense isn’t as common as…

View the Missoula Community Directory
View the Missoula Business Blog