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Commission approves micro-entrepreneur home business at 10 W. Clark St. with limits on front-yard structures

February 17, 2026 | Grantsville, Tooele County, Utah


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Commission approves micro-entrepreneur home business at 10 W. Clark St. with limits on front-yard structures
The Grantsville Planning Commission on Feb. 17 approved a conditional-use permit for a home-based micro-entrepreneurship at 10 West Clark Street, allowing a modest farm stand and a second small retail display while restricting customer access to accessory sheds and placing limits on size, hours and parking.

The applicants, Vicky Lake and Kathleen Hunt, proposed multiple small detached structures and a farm stand to sell produce, cottage-food items and crafts. Commission discussion focused on consistency with the RM-7 micro-entrepreneurship overlay and the city’s front-yard rules, which generally permit accessory buildings only in rear yards. After a detailed discussion about temporary versus permanent structures and how many customer-facing footprints are allowed, the commission approved a set of conditions intended to keep the operation low-intensity and residential in character.

Key conditions approved include:
- Business activities primarily within one enclosed structure; a farm stand may be permitted in the front corner but limited in size and hours (7 a.m.–7 p.m.).
- Two approved display stands (one 10x10 on Clark Street and one up to 10x12 near the house / side yard) as mapped and agreed by the applicants and staff.
- Other accessory structures must comply with RM-7 setback rules and may be used only for screened storage, not customer access or retail displays.
- Traffic must remain at levels typical of a home occupation; outdoor storage must be screened and approved; expansion requires additional Planning Commission review.

Applicants said the existing buildings are movable and that they could relocate one building to the backyard and use it for storage if required. "We can move this stuff in and out of the building," one applicant said while agreeing to the commission’s plan to limit customer access to the detached sheds.

Why it matters: The decision implements Grantsville’s new micro-entrepreneurship standards while affirming zoning limits that preserve residential character of front yards. Commissioners sought to balance economic opportunity for small, home-based sellers with neighborhood aesthetics and safety concerns (pedestrian traffic, school-bus stop proximity).

Next steps: Staff will finalize the permit with mapped locations and specific size limits; permit holders must maintain required business and state licenses and comply with health and safety standards. Noncompliance may result in permit revocation after due process.

Attribution: Reporting based on statements and the motion recorded at the Feb. 17, 2026 Planning Commission meeting transcript.

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