A new, powerful Citizen Portal experience is ready. Switch now

Planning commission recommends city council adopt 2025 building code updates and business license changes; approves housing-related development-code amendments

October 09, 2025 | Victorville City, San Bernardino County, California


This article was created by AI summarizing key points discussed. AI makes mistakes, so for full details and context, please refer to the video of the full meeting. Please report any errors so we can fix them. Report an error »

Planning commission recommends city council adopt 2025 building code updates and business license changes; approves housing-related development-code amendments
The Victorville Planning Commission voted unanimously on several administrative code amendments and recommendations to the City Council, including adoption of the 2025 triennial update to Title 24 building standards, a local amendment to business-licensing procedures to allow in-house live-scan fingerprinting, and a package of changes to implement recent state housing laws including SB9 and SB684.

Staff explained the Title 24 update (case PLAN25-00015) adopts the 2025 editions of the California Building, Residential, Electrical, Mechanical, Plumbing, Energy and Green Building Codes to remain consistent with state law before their Jan. 1, 2026 effective date. The commission recommended the city council find the amendment exempt from CEQA and adopt the resolution recommending the code update.

The commission also recommended council approval of changes to Chapter 7 of the development code to reflect organizational changes and authorize business-license staff to provide live-scan fingerprinting at city hall for certain license applicants. Staff explained three certified staff members will perform the service and that requests will be routed to a general email so coverage is available when a primary staffer is out.

Finally, the commission recommended council approval of a city-initiated development-code amendment (PLAN25-00013) implementing state housing laws, including ministerial review pathways and objective standards for urban lot splits, small-lot subdivisions and urban dwelling units. Staff emphasized these changes merely establish administrative procedures and objective standards so the city remains in compliance with state statutes, while noting the amendments do not authorize physical development on their own and were found exempt from CEQA.

All three items passed on unanimous votes and will be forwarded to the City Council with the commission's recommendations.

View the Full Meeting & All Its Details

This article offers just a summary. Unlock complete video, transcripts, and insights as a Founder Member.

Watch full, unedited meeting videos
Search every word spoken in unlimited transcripts
AI summaries & real-time alerts (all government levels)
Permanent access to expanding government content
Access Full Meeting

30-day money-back guarantee