Author Archives: tomfid

Final drafts and summary for the June 17, 2021 hearing

The following are final drafts of the zoning regulation, as it will be discussed Thursday. See the previous post for some Q&A in the comments. See also the high level summary at BCPOA.net.

The Staff Report (third document) contains a useful summary of the changes on pages 2 and 3.

Richard Lyon’s testimony provides a good summary of the benefits of the zoning update, as well as remaining issues:

You can comment on the proposal in writing, or in person and on Zoom at the hearing on Thursday. Various options are listed here:

http://bcpoa.net/resources/contacting-the-county/

The hearing agenda is here:

https://gallatincomt.virtualtownhall.net/planning-community-development/pages/planning-zoning-commission-public-meetings-agendas

Following the Bridger Canyon section, the commission will hear proposed amendments to the Administration section that (eventually) applies to all Part 1 citizen-initiated districts, including ours. I think most of these have been initiated by the Springhill district, and we regard them as positive. There will also be a discussion of possible improvements to public notice methods. Jecyn Bremer’s testimony on behalf of Springhill District has a useful discussion of these:

May/June 2021 Updates for Commission Discussion

The following files document the proposed Bridger Canyon zoning amendment, to be discussed at the P&Z Commission hearing on June 17, 2021. https://gallatincomt.virtualtownhall.net/planning-community-development/pages/planning-zoning-commission-public-meetings-agendas (Note that this meeting is a week later than normal, so the agenda is not available as of this posting.)

See http://bcpoa.net/resources/contacting-the-county/ for links to the hearing agenda and how to comment on the proposal.

County-wide Part 1 district Administration update

Part 1 zoning districts are citizen-initiated districts authorized under MT 76-2-101. Gallatin County has decided to harmonize the administration of all Part 1 districts, which is generally a good thing. The current implementation is at https://gallatincomt.virtualtownhall.net/sites/g/files/vyhlif606/f/uploads/part_1_zoning_administrative_regulation_5.21.19_1.pdf (a copy is uploaded below for convenience.

The next implementation of the administrative regulations will be in the Springhill zoning district. Residents there have organized the Springhill Alliance to review and influence the changes. Their comments on the current draft follow.

March 2021 Zoning Draft

The Planning Department has prepared a new, complete draft of the Bridger Canyon zoning regulation.

We have not reviewed this in detail yet, but major changes over the Zoning Advisory Committee’s last work include omission of revisions to the PUD section and dropping the Short Term Rentals section in General Standards (Chapter 15).

These are all Acrobat pdf files, but due to the soul-destroying WordPress block editor, they look like downloads. If you click the download buttons, the pdf will probably open normally in your browser for easy reading.

Summary

Last June the County Planning & Zoning Commission adopted a Resolution of Intention to Amend the Bridger Canyon Zoning Regulations, the first step toward formal consideration of the new zoning that we will propose for the Bridger Canyon Zoning District.

We have near-final drafts on almost all substantive portions of the new zoning regulations that we will propose. These were summarized in last year’s newsletter [possible link] and the drafts have changed little over the past year. (The only substantive changes are to the regulations governing wireless communications services, to conform to revised federal regulations.) A number of factors have delayed completion of the draft, including. some unexpected comments from the County Planning Department. BCPOA’s representatives on the Zoning Advisory Committee are working toward completion, hopefully for presentation to the County this autumn.

Background

The update improves the regulations’ implementation of the goals expressed in the 1971 General Plan, and resolves a number of issues that are often needlessly controversial.

The update addresses all areas of the Canyon, except for the Bridger Bowl Base Area, and all topics except administrative procedures. The Base Area will be tackled separately, because its complexity would delay implementation of good progress to date. The administration section is being revised in a separate, county-wide process.

The advisory board has held five public meetings at the fire station community room to share the details with residents and collect input. If you missed those, here is an overview of the proposal.

The update process was started by BCPOA, led by Bruce Jodar, but was sidelined in 2006 with the latest Base Area controversy. It’s now led by a Zoning Advisory Board convened by the County Commission, with support from Planning Dept. staff. The rewrite is guided by the General Plan for our district. Changes attempt to implement the plan better, and are careful to strike a balance between private enjoyment of property and preservation of public resources like wildlife and water quality. Wherever possible, standards have been made objective and numerical, to maximize clarity minimize the kinds of uses that require a public hearing for a permit.

Major Changes

There are three major components of the update:

1. The uses permitted in the AE and RF districts, which comprise the vast majority of the canyon, have been updated to eliminate a few obsolete uses, like feedlots, and to recognize new ones, like solar panels. The calculation of lot size and density for subdivision has also been improved. Setbacks from watercourses and other features have been modified, in part to make them more consistent with subdivision regulations

2. The General Standards governing all of the districts have been improved in a variety of ways. The biggest change is the creation of an Accessory Dwelling standard, that replaces the previous options for caretaker residences and guesthouses. This generally represents a relaxation of the previous standards, but there are new provisions limiting the permissible size and number and requiring proximity of accessory dwellings to primary residences, so that whatever burdens these dwellings imposed weigh most heavily on the owners who also benefit from them, and the temptation of separate rental is minimized.

Separate rental units have not historically been legal under the zoning, except by explicit subdivision, and we have preserved that restriction. The board felt that permitting multiple dwelling rentals would constitute an increase in density that could not be squared with the General Plan, and would require more intrusive regulation of other uses in order to mitigate the added traffic, water and other pressures that would result.

Other standards cover guest ranches (clarified), B&Bs (little changed), accessory buildings (requiring CUPs for very large structures), building height, home occupations, refuse storage and dark skies lighting.

A new section governs short term rentals, which may be permitted as a Conditional Use. The standards seek to preserve the General Plan’s low density and rural character of neighborhoods without unduly impacting reasonable uses.

3. Planned Unit Developments. The PUD was originally conceived as a way to preserve open space and agricultural land in the bulk of the canyon by transferring density to the Bridger Bowl Base Area. Some very nice PUDs have been done, which protect resources and viewsheds through careful design and building envelopes. But along the way, through ambiguous drafting and Base Area developer pressure, the regulation has lost its way, and become at times a density giveaway rather than a fair public-private tradeoff.

When we surveyed the canyon a few years ago, many of you favored getting rid of the PUD and density bonuses altogether. For continuity, the new regulation does not do this, though it would have made our job easier. Instead, it makes the standards for obtaining a PUD more comprehensive, and includes objective criteria for obtaining density through transfers or a bonus founded on preservation of functional, contiguous open space. It also seeks to reduce the endless pressure to tinker with building envelopes after the fact by requiring explicit, surveyed building parcels and stating the limited conditions under which approvals may be amended.

Next Steps

We’re proud of this update and expect it to serve us well in years to come. We urge you to look at the proposal carefully, because it is so important to the future development of the land- scape we call home.

The next step in the approval process will be public hearings before a joint meeting of the Planning & Zoning and County Commissions. The update is not yet on the agenda, but we hope this will happen soon. We’ll be looking for your support and participation!