The planning commission approved a temporary subdivision fee schedule to be used while staff finalizes the detailed fee structure and supporting forms. Committee member (speaker S4) moved that the commission adopt the temporary fee schedule; committee member Kevin (speaker S2) seconded the motion and members voted to approve it.
Presenter (speaker S1) cited examples from other Utah communities to guide the commission's decision. "Here's Highland, $2,250 preliminary plat, review cost for the engineer," the Presenter said, adding that many jurisdictions package a set number of reviews into a fee (two reviews, in the example). Chair (speaker S3) and members discussed a short-term approach: set a small application fee (the discussion mentioned $100 as an example) and bill other costs at actual cost until the commission finalizes the permanent schedule.
Members said the interim schedule is meant to ensure applicants cover engineering and review costs and to protect the town while longer-term ordinance appendages are completed. The motion passed on a voice vote.
During the open discussion and public comment period, participants raised practical concerns that could affect how subdivisions are engineered and permitted. Committee member Kevin and a public commenter (speaker S5) discussed local water availability and reservoir levels, noting lower snowpack and uncertain inflows; participants also raised questions about road construction standards and whether utilities should be placed underground for larger subdivisions. Those remarks were presented as local observations and planning considerations rather than formal changes to policy.
The commission confirmed the next meeting will be on April 29 and asked staff to return with refined fee details and the updated supporting forms.