On second reading the City Commission considered amendments to Chapter 9 of the municipal code to expand standards for residential and nonresidential property maintenance, including language clarifying when parking surfaces may be considered excessively worn or discolored and what maintenance could entail.
Kate Johnson and other business and HOA representatives spoke during public comment urging clearer, time‑based criteria—suggesting a grace period (for example, a five‑year expectation for new surfacing) to avoid repeated, costly repaving due to natural weathering. Mayor Michelle J. Gomez and several commissioners discussed whether the proposed language is overly broad and might be applied unevenly to plazas and small businesses. The mayor expressed concern about punitive enforcement and urged staff to balance safety and aesthetics with reasonable expectations for private property owners.
After deliberation the commission approved the ordinance on second reading by roll call, 3–2. Commissioners supporting adoption said the changes allow staff to enforce basic safety and maintenance standards; commissioners opposing the ordinance said it lacks specificity and could unintentionally penalize property owners for normal weathering.
The ordinance will take effect as provided in the text; staff and the community were encouraged to continue dialogue on implementation details and timelines.