A staff speaker explained that a committee considered a sample ordinance to regulate specialty shops but the city attorney found a state statute that would limit the city's ability to use that ordinance approach. "Attorney Gill did some more research and found out that there's actually a state statute that prohibits us doing it this way," staff said. As a result, staff recommended exploring zoning restrictions and new hemp-licensing provisions as alternate regulatory tools and continuing research.
The same staff update included enforcement and accessibility items: the property-maintenance officer logged 160 violations in March and scheduled multiple hearings for mid- to late-April, and the city used $15,000 in current-year speeding-fund allocations to remove an old concrete island and add two compliant handicap stalls in the municipal parking area. Staff said quotes for handrails and additional ADA improvements are pending.
Why it matters: local regulatory options may be constrained by state law; zoning or licensing paths could provide the remaining legal tools. Property-maintenance enforcement and ADA upgrades affect residents' quality of life and municipal liability.
What’s next: staff will continue legal research and return with possible zoning or licensing solutions; court dates and ADA project procurement will proceed as scheduled.