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Council debates water, road and fire‑safety standards for Bucking Iron Business Park final plat

December 22, 2025 | Sheridan, Sheridan County, Wyoming


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Council debates water, road and fire‑safety standards for Bucking Iron Business Park final plat
City Planner Kelly Schroeder briefed the council on the final plat for Bucking Iron Business Park, a proposed 20‑acre, six‑lot industrial subdivision east of East Ridge Road, and presented staff comments to the Sheridan County Board of Commissioners.

Schroeder said the staff recommendation (to be sent as comments to the county) is to request that water infrastructure be extended to the subdivision, accept a decentralized sewer system, and require that Bucking Iron Circle be paved to an appropriate rural standard if water and sewer are extended. She cited the city/county memorandum of understanding (MOU) that applies to subdivisions within the one‑mile urban service area and noted staff softened language from "shall" to a "recommendation" to reflect that the county's deliberation would occur in writing.

Council members expressed differing views. Council member Wood said requiring the developer to run roughly 2,700 feet of water line for the benefit of a single contractor is "not business friendly" and said he would vote against the recommendation to require line extension. Councilman Lumen and others emphasized fire safety and the value of ensuring hydrant access and a paved road for heavy equipment, with Lumen arguing that if the subdivision could be annexed in the future the city should encourage installation to protect property and public safety.

Several councilors noted past inconsistency applying the MOU's standards (citing the WLM subdivision) and urged staff to revisit the MOU's language or consider pre‑annexation agreements, SIDs, or other tools to manage future development and cost sharing. Utilities Director Dan Roberts described the practical difficulties of owning and operating a long, low‑use distribution main and said the city may not find it cost effective to take ownership if the revenue does not cover long‑term costs.

Planner Schroeder said the county requires a fire safety plan and that the Sheridan Area Rural Fire District had approved such a plan noting two hydrants within roughly a mile and a half of the site; staff recommended the council forward comments and allow county deliberation.

Next steps: staff will finalize recommended comments for the county and present them at next week's meeting; council indicated they would continue discussion on MOU consistency and potential tools to share trunk‑line costs in future sessions.

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