Residents delivered a petition to the clerk during the Jan. 12 public-comment period asking the Lauderhill City Commission to decline approval for activity at 1701 NW 31st Avenue.
Annie Wright said the petition’s signers oppose special exceptions or development that would convert the site to a light-industry zoning district with outside storage. “We, the undersigned… urge our leaders to act now to decline approval for above action concerning the 1701 Northwest 31st Avenue in Lauderhill,” Wright said, reading the petition. She said neighbors have observed ongoing activity at the site and worry about environmental impacts on the West Kenlock/Kenlark neighborhood.
The petition and speakers cited concerns including air quality, dust, noise, vibrations that can ‘pound’ and shake homes, and potential property damage. Mrs. Cooper, identified as president of the West Kenlark Homeowners Association, said the HOA had already been briefed on the issue and urged residents to attend association meetings and engage with city staff; she also raised a separate concern about potential Bed and Breakfast uses on 14th and 16th streets.
City officials told petitioners they could give the documents to the clerk and that the petition could be read into the record. Vice Mayor Campbell asked the city manager to address resident questions later in the meeting; no zoning decision was made during the public-comment period.
Why it matters: Rezoning or special exceptions to allow light-industry or outside storage can change noise, traffic and environmental conditions in residential neighborhoods and involve formal review processes. Petitioners requested the commission decline approval and asked for city follow-up.