Patrick, a county planning staffer, summarized proposed zoning text amendments (ZTA 2025‑02) intended to reduce regulatory burdens that generate frequent Board of Adjustment (BOA) cases. He said expanding accessory‑structure allowances should eliminate an average of about three BOA cases per month under current standards.
"The biggest one is reducing our regulation on accessory buildings," Patrick said, and the draft adds a new definition for tiny homes and codifies decommissioning and financial‑assurance requirements for solar facilities to mirror recent NCDEQ rules. The draft also clarifies accessory dwelling unit (ADU) sizing and moves mobile‑home language toward a Unified Development Ordinance (UDO) framework.
Commissioners probed an appearance and compatibility clause that would require ADUs and accessory dwellings to "resemble the primary structure to the greatest extent possible." One commissioner said such language can be subjective and add expense for property owners; planning staff suggested the language could be adjusted to read as a strong suggestion rather than a strict requirement.
Patrick and Alan Glines said the community‑master‑plan tool (conditional zoning with automatic site‑team review) and a switch to digital site plans are intended to speed reviews for large or mixed‑use developments. Staff will bring clarifying edits and a public hearing remains scheduled.