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Commissioners press for 60-foot easement, road safeguards for Tranquility Estates

February 12, 2024 | Jefferson County, Idaho


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Commissioners press for 60-foot easement, road safeguards for Tranquility Estates
The Jefferson County Board of Commissioners spent an extended portion of its Feb. 9 meeting on Tranquility Estates, a proposed plat that staff and a surveyor said would benefit from a 60-foot access easement and a 60-foot canal setback shown on the recorded plat.

A surveyor representing the applicant explained options for the plat and warned that the proposed configuration creates frontages near 190 feet and that constructing county-standard roads for additional lots could require roughly 1,200–1,300 feet of road work, which he said may not be financially feasible for the owner. He also noted the current proposal envisions the lot remaining a single 15‑acre parcel rather than dividing into multiple 5‑acre parcels at this time.

Commissioners repeatedly framed the issue as a planning-for-the-future decision: adding a 60-foot dedicated right‑of‑way now could protect access and avoid protracted disputes with neighbors should the property be subdivided decades later, while not adding it could leave future owners facing expensive retrofits. Staff noted they are developing a private-road ordinance that provides more options for private-road design but emphasized fire-code access and hammerhead/cul‑de‑sac requirements that must be met if the road is later converted to a county standard.

County staff directed the applicant to revise the plat to show the 60-foot easement and the canal setback (a dotted line on the plat was suggested for clarity) and to reconcile contradictory water‑rights notes; staff also recommended showing a hammerhead turnaround for fire access where the easement currently ends. The board asked for a revised submittal and indicated it will coordinate engineering cost estimates and a possible development agreement if the applicant proceeds with road work.

The exchange reflected a broader policy choice about balancing near-term development feasibility with long-term public-safety and access concerns.

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